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Dennis Lynn Rader (born March 9, 1945) is an
American serial killer who murdered 10 people in Sedgwick County (in
and around Wichita, Kansas), between 1974 and 1991. He was known as
the BTK killer (or the BTK strangler), which stands for
"bind, torture and kill" and describes his modus operandi. He
sent boastful letters describing the details of the killings to police
and to local news outlets during the period of time in which the
murders took place. After a long hiatus in the 1990s, he resumed
sending letters in 2004, leading to his 2005 arrest and subsequent
conviction.
Early life
Rader is the eldest of four sons born to William Elvin Rader and
Dorothea Mae Cook. Though born in Pittsburg, Kansas, he grew up in
Wichita, attended Riverview School, and later graduated from Wichita
Heights High School. In 1957, he was confirmed into the Zion
Lutheran Church.
According to several reports, including his own confessions, as a
child he tortured animals, one of the warning signs in the MacDonald
triad. He also harbored a sexual fetish for women's underwear, he
would later steal panties from his victims and wear them himself.
Rader attended Kansas Wesleyan University from 1965 to 1966. He
subsequently spent four years (1966-1970) in the U.S. Air Force,
stationed in Texas, Alabama, Okinawa, South Korea, Greece and Turkey.
When he returned to the United States, he moved to
Park City, a suburb located seven miles north of Wichita. He worked
for a time in the meat department of Leekers IGA supermarket in Park
City alongside his mother, a bookkeeper for the store.
Personal life
Rader attended Butler County Community College in El Dorado, earning
an associate's degree in Electronics in 1973. He enrolled at Wichita
State University that same fall. He graduated from there in 1979 with
a bachelor's degree in Administration of Justice. He married Paula
Dietz, on May 22, 1971, and they had one son and one daughter.
From 1972 to 1973, Rader worked as an assembler for
the Coleman Company, a camping gear firm, as had two of his early
victims. He then worked for a short time for Cessna, in 1973. From
November 1974 until being fired in July 1988, Rader worked at a
Wichita-based office of ADT Security Services, a company that sold and
installed alarm systems for commercial businesses during Rader's years
there. He held several positions, including installation manager. It
was believed that he learned how to defeat home security systems while
there.
Rader was a census field operations supervisor for
the Wichita area in 1989, prior to the 1990 federal census.
In 1991 Rader was hired to be supervisor of the
Compliance Department at Park City, a two-employee, multi-functional
department in charge of "animal control, housing problems, zoning,
general permit enforcement and a variety of nuisance cases." In this
position, neighbors recalled him as sometimes overzealous and
extremely strict; one neighbor complained that he euthanized her dog
for no reason. On March 2, 2005, the Park City council terminated
Rader's employment for failure to report to work or to call in; he had
been arrested for the murders five days earlier.
Rader served on both the Sedgwick County's Board of
Zoning Appeals and the Animal Control Advisory Board (appointed in
1996 and resigned in 1998). He was also a member of Christ Lutheran
Church, a Lutheran congregation of about 200 people, near his former
high school. He had been a member for about 30 years and had been
elected president of the Congregation Council. He was also a Cub Scout
leader. His son became an Eagle Scout. On July 27, 2005, after Rader's
arrest, Sedgwick County District Judge Eric Yost waived the usual 60-day
waiting period and granted an immediate divorce for his wife, agreeing
that her mental health was in danger. Rader did not contest the
divorce, and the 33-year marriage was ended. Paula Rader said in her
divorce petition that her mental and physical condition has been
adversely affected by the marriage.
Victims
January 15, 1974: Four members of the Otero
family
Joseph Otero
Julie Otero, Joseph's wife
Joseph Otero II, son
Josephine Otero, daughter
April 4, 1974: Kathryn Bright (he also shot
Bright's brother, Kevin, twice, but he survived)
March 17, 1977: Shirley Vian
December 8, 1977: Nancy Fox
April 27, 1985: Marine Hedge
September 16, 1986: Vicki Wegerle
January 19, 1991: Dolores Davis
He collected items from the scenes of the murders
he committed and, reportedly, he had no items that were related to any
other killings. He did have other intended victims, notably Anna
Williams, 63, who in 1979 escaped death by returning home much later
than he expected. Rader explained during his confession that he had
become obsessed with Williams and was "absolutely livid" when she
evaded him. Rader spent hours waiting in her home but became impatient
and left when she did not return home from visiting friends
Rader had stalked two women in the 1980s and one in the mid-1990s.
They filed restraining orders against him and one moved away.
Rader also admitted in his interrogation that he was planning to
kill again. He had even set a date, October 2004, and was stalking
his intended victim.
Arrest and
conviction
By 2004, the investigation of the BTK Killer had gone cold. Then,
Rader sent a letter to the police, claiming responsibility for a
killing that had previously not been attributed to him. DNA
collected from under the fingernails of that victim provided police
with previously unknown evidence. They then began DNA testing
hundreds of men in an effort to find the serial killer. Altogether,
some 1100 DNA samples would be taken.
The police
corresponded with the BTK Killer (Rader) in an effort to gain his
confidence. Then, in one of his communications with police, Rader
asked them if it was possible to trace information from floppy disks.
The police department replied that there was no way of knowing what
computer such a disk had been used on, when in fact such ways existed.
Rader then sent his message and floppy to the police department, which
quickly checked the metadata of the Microsoft Word document. In the
metadata, they found that the document had been made by a man who
called himself Dennis. They also found a link to the Lutheran Church.
When the police searched on the Internet for 'Lutheran Church Wichita
Dennis', they found his family name, and were able to identify a
suspect: Dennis Rader, a Lutheran Deacon. The police also knew BTK
owned a black Jeep Cherokee. When investigators drove by Rader's house
they noticed a black Jeep Cherokee parked outside.
The police now had strong circumstantial evidence
against Rader, but they needed more direct evidence in order to detain
him. They controversially obtained a warrant to test the DNA of a Pap
smear Rader's daughter had taken at the University of Kansas medical
clinic while she was a student there. The DNA of the Pap smear was a
near match to the DNA of the sample taken from the victim's
fingernails indicating that the killer was closely related to Rader's
daughter. This was the evidence the police needed to make an arrest
On February 25, 2005, Rader was detained near his home in Park City
and accused of the BTK killings. At a press conference the next
morning, Wichita Police Chief Norman Williams announced, "the bottom
line... BTK is arrested." Rader pleaded guilty to the murders on
June 27, 2005, giving a graphic account of his crimes in court.
On August 18, 2005, he was sentenced to serve 10 consecutive life
sentences, one life sentence per murder victim. This included nine
life sentences that each had the possibility of parole after 15 years,
and one life sentence with the possibility of parole after 40 years.
It meant that, in total, Rader would be eligible for parole after 175
years of imprisonment. This result guaranteed that Rader would spend
the rest of his life in prison, without any possibility of parole.
Rader was ineligible for the death penalty, because
Kansas did not have a death penalty during the period of time in which
he committed his crimes. Kansas reinstated death penalty laws in 1994.
Letters
Rader was particularly known for sending taunting letters to police
and newspapers. There were several communications from BTK from 1974
to 1979. The first was a letter that had been stashed in an
engineering book in the Wichita Public Library in October 1974 that
described in detail the killing of the Otero family in January of
that year.
In early 1978, he sent another letter to television station KAKE in
Wichita, claiming responsibility for the murders of the Oteros,
Shirley Vian, Nancy Fox and another unidentified victim assumed to
be Kathryn Bright (not identified because her brother survived and
could have identified him). He suggested a number of possible names
for himself, including the one that stuck: BTK. He demanded media
attention in this second letter, and it was finally announced that
Wichita did indeed have a serial killer at large. A poem was
enclosed entitled "Oh! Death to Nancy," a botched version of the
lyrics of the American folk song "Oh Death."
In
1979 he sent two identical packages, one to an intended victim who was
not at home when he broke into her house and the other to KAKE. These
featured another poem, "Oh Anna Why Didn't You Appear", a drawing of
what he had intended to do to his victim, as well as some small items
he had pilfered from Williams' home. Apparently, Rader had waited for
several hours inside the home of Anna Williams, but left when she did
not come home until later.
In 1988, after the murders of three members of the
Fager family in Wichita, a letter was received from someone claiming
to be the BTK killer in which he denied being the perpetrator of this
crime. He did credit the killer with having done "admirable work". It
was not proven until 2005 that this letter was in fact written by the
genuine BTK killer (Rader), although he is not considered by police to
have committed this crime
In March 2004, a series of 11 communications from
BTK (Rader) to the local media led directly to his arrest in February
2005. The Wichita Eagle received a letter from someone using
the return address Bill Thomas Killman.
The author of the letter claimed that he had
murdered Vicki Wegerle on September 16, 1986, and enclosed photographs
of the crime scene and a photocopy of her driver's license, which had
been stolen at the time of the crime. Prior to this, it had not been
definitively established that Wegerle was killed by BTK (Rader).
In May 2004, a word puzzle was received by KAKE. On
June 9, 2004, a package was found taped to a stop sign at the corner
of First and Kansas in Wichita, containing graphic descriptions of the
Otero murders and a sketch labeled, "The Sexual Thrill Is My Bill."
Also enclosed was a chapter list for a proposed book entitled "The BTK
Story," which mimicked a story written in 1999 by Court TV (now truTV)
crime writer David Lohr. Chapter One was entitled, "A Serial Killer Is
Born.".
In July, a package was dropped into the return slot
at the downtown public library containing more bizarre material,
including the claim that he was responsible for the death of 19-year-old
Jake Allen in Argonia, Kansas earlier that same month. This claim was
found to be false and the death has been ruled a suicide.
In October 2004, a manila envelope was dropped into
a UPS box in Wichita containing a series of cards with images of
terror and bondage of children pasted on them. Also included was a
poem threatening the life of lead investigator Lt. Ken Landwehr and a
false autobiography containing many details about Rader's life. These
details were later released to the public.
In December 2004, Wichita police received another
package from the BTK killer. This time the package was found in
Wichita's Murdock Park. It contained the driver's license of Nancy
Fox, which was noted as stolen from the crime scene, as well as a doll
that was symbolically bound at the hands and feet with a plastic bag
tied over its head.
In January 2005, Rader attempted to leave a cereal
box in the bed of a pickup truck at a Home Depot in Wichita, but the
box was at first discarded by the owner. It was later retrieved from
the trash after Rader himself asked what had become of it in a later
message. Surveillance tape of the parking lot from that date revealed
a distant figure driving a black Jeep Cherokee leaving the box in the
pickup.
In February, more postcards were sent to KAKE, and
another cereal box left at a rural location that contained another
bound doll, apparently meant to symbolize the murder of 11-year-old
Josephine Otero. In his letters to police, Rader asked if his writings,
if put on a floppy disk, could be traced or not. The police answered
his question via a newspaper ad posted in the Wichita Eagle
saying it would be OK to use the disk.
On February 16, 2005 he sent a floppy disk to Fox
TV station KSAS in Wichita. Forensic analysis quickly determined that
the disk had been used by the Christ Lutheran Church in Wichita, as
well as a reference to the name "Dennis". An internet search
determined that a "Dennis Rader" was president of the church council.
He was arrested on February 25.
Example
The following is purportedly the text of a 1978 letter, including
spelling and grammatical errors:
I find the newspaper not writing about the poem on Vain unamusing. A
little paragraph would have enough. Iknow it not the media fault.
The Police Cheif he keep things quiet, and doesn't let the public
know there a psycho running around lose strangling mostly women,
there 7 in the ground; who will be next?
How many do I have to Kill before I get a name in the paper or some
national attention. Do the cop think that all those deaths are not
related? Golly -gee, yes the M.O. is different in each, but look a
pattern is developing. The victims are tie up-most have been women-phone
cut- bring some bondage mater sadist tendencies-no struggle, outside
the death spot-no wintness except the Vain's Kids. They were very
lucky; a phone call save them. I was go-ng to tape the boys and put
plastics bag over there head like I did Joseph, and Shirley. And
then hang the girl. God-oh God what a beautiful sexual relief that
would been. Josephine,when I hung her really turn me on; her
pleading for mercy then the rope took whole, she helpless; staring
at me with wide terror fill eyes the rope getting tighter-tighter.
You don't understand these things because your not underthe
influence of factor x). The same thing that made Son of Sam, Jack
the Ripper, Havery Glatman, Boston Strangler, Dr. H. H. Holmes Panty
Hose Strangler OF Florida, Hillside Strangler, Ted of the West Coast
and many more infamous character kill. Which seem s senseless, but
we cannot help it. There is no help, no cure, except death or being
caught and put away. It a terrible nightmarebut, you see I don't
lose any sleep over it. After a thing like Fox I ccome home and go
about life like anyone else. And I will be like that until the urge
hit me again. It not continuous and I don;t have a lot of time. It
take time to set a kill, one mistake and it all over. Since I about
blew it on the phone-handwriting is out-letter guide is to long and
typewriter can be traced too,.My short poem of death and maybe a
drawing;later on real picture and maybe a tape of the sound will
come your way. How will you know me. Before a murder or murders you
will receive a copy of the initials B.T.K. , you keep that copy the
original will show up some day on guess who? May you not be the
unluck one!
P.S.
How about some name for me, its time: 7 down and many more to go. I
like the following How about you? 'THE B.T.K. STRANGLER', WICHITA
STRANGLER', 'POETIC STRANGLER', 'THE BOND AGE STRANGLER' OR PSYCHO'
THE WICHITA HANGMAN THE WICHITA EXECUTIONER, 'THE GAROTE PHATHOM', 'THE
ASPHIXIATER'.
B.T.K
Arrest
The BTK killer's last known communication with the media and police
was a padded envelope which arrived at FOX affiliate KSAS-TV in
Wichita on February 16, 2005. A purple, 1.44-MB Memorex floppy disk
was enclosed in the package. Also enclosed were a letter, a
photocopy of the cover of a 1989 novel about a serial killer (Rules
of Prey) and a gold-colored necklace with a large medallion.
Police found metadata embedded in a deleted Microsoft Word document
that was, unbeknownst to Rader, still on the disk. The metadata,
recovered using the forensic software EnCase,
contained "Christ Lutheran Church", and the document was
marked as last modified by "Dennis". A search of the church website
turned up Dennis Rader as president of the congregation council.
Police began surveillance of Rader.
Sometime during this period, police obtained a warrant for the
medical records of Rader's daughter. A tissue sample seized at this
time was tested for DNA and provided a familial match with semen
collected at an earlier BTK crime scene. This, along with other
evidence gathered prior to and during the surveillance, gave police
probable cause for an arrest.
Rader was stopped
while driving near his home and taken into custody shortly after noon
on February 25, 2005. Immediately after, law enforcement officials,
including a Wichita Police bomb unit truck, two SWAT trucks, and KBI,
FBI and ATF agents, converged on Rader's residence near the
intersection of I-135 and 61st Street North. Once in handcuffs, he was
asked by an officer, "Mr. Rader, do you know why you're going downtown?"
to which he replied, "Oh, I have my suspicions, why?" Police searched
Rader's home and vehicle collecting evidence, including: computer
equipment, a pair of black pantyhose retrieved from a shed, and a
cylindrical container. The church he attended, his office at City Hall
and the main branch of the Park City library were also searched that
day. Officers were seen removing a computer from his City Hall office,
but it is unclear if any evidence was found at these locations.
After his arrest, Rader talked to the police for
several hours. He stated he chose to resurface in 2004 for various
reasons, including David Lohr's feature story on the case and the
release of the book Nightmare in Wichita: The Hunt for the BTK
Strangler by Robert Beattie. He wanted the opportunity to tell his
story his own way. He also said he was bored because his children had
grown up and he had more time on his hands.
On February 26, 2005, The Wichita Police Department
announced in a press conference that they were holding Rader as the
prime suspect in the BTK killings,
Rader was formally charged with the murders on February 28, 2005.
Legal
proceedings
Kansas reinstated the death penalty in 1994. The last known BTK
killing was in 1991, making all known BTK murders ineligible for the
death penalty. Even if later murders are linked to the BTK killer,
it was originally unclear whether the death penalty would come into
play, as the Kansas Supreme Court declared the state's capital
punishment law unconstitutional on December 17, 2004. That ruling
from the Kansas Supreme Court, however, was reversed by the United
States Supreme Court on June 26, 2006 in the case of Kansas v.
Marsh, and the Kansas death penalty statute was upheld. The
Sunday after his arrest, Associated Press cited an anonymous source
that Rader had confessed to other murders in addition to the ones
with which he was already connected.
When asked about the reported confessions, Sedgwick County District
Attorney Nola Foulston said "Your information is patently false",
but she refused to say whether Rader had made any confessions or
whether investigators were looking into Rader's possible involvement
in more unsolved killings.
On March 5, news sources claimed to have verified by multiple
sources that Rader had confessed to the 10 murders he was charged
with, but no additional ones.
On February 28, 2005, Rader was formally charged with 10 counts of
first degree murder. He made his first appearance via
videoconference from jail. He was represented by a public defender.
Bail was continued at $10 million.
On May 3, District Court Judge Gregory Waller entered not guilty
pleas to the 10 charges on Rader's behalf, as Rader did not speak at
his arraignment.
On June 27, the scheduled trial date, Rader changed his plea to
guilty. He unemotionally described the murders in detail, and made
no apologies.
On August 18, Rader faced sentencing. Victims' families made
statements, followed by Rader, who apologized for the crimes. He was
sentenced to 10 consecutive life terms, which requires a minimum of
175 years without a chance of parole. Because Kansas had no death
penalty at the time the murders were committed, life imprisonment
was the maximum penalty allowed by law.
On August 19, Rader was moved from the Sedgwick County Jail to the
El Dorado Correctional Facility, a Kansas state prison, to begin
serving his life sentence as inmate #0083707 with an earliest
possible release date of February 26, 2180.
According to witnesses, while travelling the 40-minute drive from
Wichita to El Dorado, Rader talked about innocuous topics such as
the weather, but began to cry when the victims' families' statements
from the court proceedings came on the radio. Rader is now being
held in the EDCF Special Management unit, also known as
solitary confinement, for "the inmate's own protection", a
designation he most likely will retain for the remainder of his
incarceration. He is confined to the cell 23 hours a day with the
exception of voluntary solo one-hour exercise yard time, and access
to the shower three times per week.
Beginning
April 23, 2006, having reached "Incentive Level Two", Rader has been
allowed to purchase and watch television, purchase and listen to the
radio, receive and read magazines, and have other privileges for good
behavior. The victims' families disagreed with this decision.
According to Rader's record in the Kansas
Department of Corrections database, he had a Class Two
disciplinary report concerning "mail" on April 10, 2006.
Further
investigation
Police in Wichita, Park City, and several surrounding cities are
looking into unsolved cases before, during, and after 1974 and 1991
in cooperation with the state police and the FBI. In particular they
are focusing on cases after 1994 when the death penalty was
reinstated in Kansas. Moreover police in surrounding states such as
Missouri and Oklahoma are also investigating cold cases which fit
Rader's pattern.
The FBI, Air Patrol, and local
jurisdictions at Rader's former duty stations are checking into
unsolved cases during Rader's time in the service. As of November
2009, no other murders have been discovered that can be attributed to
Rader.
Evidence pertaining to the murders
Because Rader did not contest his guilt, most evidence was not tested
in court. However, physical and circumstantial facts that would have
corroborated Rader as the BTK killer include:
DNA analysis of BTK's semen and material taken
from underneath the fingernails of victim Vicki Wegerle match the
DNA profile of Dennis Rader.
Rader's grammar and writing style matches letters
and poems received from BTK, though none of his communications were
handwritten, but typed, stenciled, stamped with a stamp set or
computer generated.
A pay phone that the killer used to report a
murder in 1977 was located a few blocks from ADT Security (Rader's
workplace at the time).
Rader had attended Wichita State University in
the 1970s. Wichita Police Detective Arlyn G. Smith II and his
partner George Scantlin traced BTK's photocopied communications to
two photocopy machines, one at Wichita State University and a second
copier at the Wichita Public Library. BTK murder victim Kathryn
Bright's brother Kevin, who was shot twice by BTK, reported that the
killer had asked him if he had seen him at the university. A poem in
one of the killer's letters was similar to a folk song taught by a
professor on that campus in that time period, though Rader himself
dismissed any connection.
Rader lived on the same street as Marine Hedge,
just houses away. The BTK killer's other victims were in and around
central Wichita, except for his final victim Dolores (Dee) Davis,
who lived a half-mile east of Park City.
Two of the victims (Julie Otero and Kathryn
Bright) worked at the Coleman Company, though not during the same
period that Rader worked there. Rader worked at Coleman only a short
time and not at the same location as the victims.
Rader's 16 plus hour confession, given fully and
freely after receiving multiple Miranda warnings and recorded on
over 20 DVDs, in which he alluded to all 10 known murders in
remarkable (and grisly) detail.
Semen found on Josephine Otero or near the bodies
of his victims Josephine Otero, Shirley Vian and Nancy Fox was
critical evidence linking Rader to the crimes, and DNA obtained from
fingernail scrapings of Vicki Wegerle's left hand matched Rader's
DNA, eliminating any doubt that he was her murderer. Rader also sent
trophies to police in his letters, and others were discovered in his
office. Other cold cases in Kansas were reopened to see if Rader's
DNA matched crime scenes, but Rader's confession was limited to the
10 known victims and police and prosecutors do not believe there
were any more victims because of the extensive records and
memorabilia he kept on each of his victims
Post-arrest notoriety and profit
On July 22, 2005, a controversy erupted on CNN's
Nancy Grace show over a poem that Dennis Rader had written that was
passed on to someone who then sold it on an auction site that
specializes in serial killer memorabilia. The poem was titled "Black
Friday", an ode to the day he was arrested. The poem expressed
Rader's unhappiness about being caught, with one of the verses
proclaiming, "The dark side of me has been exposed."
On August 12, 2005, Dateline NBC aired
Confessions of BTK.
Massachusetts psychologist Robert Mendoza was hired by Rader's court-appointed
public defenders to conduct an interview after he pleaded guilty on
June 27. NBC claimed Rader knew the interview might be on TV, but
that was a false statement according to the Sedgwick County
Sheriff's department. Rader mentioned the interview during his
sentencing statement.
On October 25, 2005, the Kansas Attorney General filed a petition to
sue Robert Mendoza and Tali Waters, co-owners of Cambridge Forensic
Consultants, LLC, for breach of contract, claiming they intended to
benefit financially from the use of information obtained from
involvement in Rader’s defense. On May 10, 2007, Mendoza settled the
case for $30,000 with no admission of wrongdoing. The Kansas
Attorney General's office arranged for the settlement money to be
distributed to families of the victims.
Wikipedia.org
Dennis Lynn Rader
(born March 9, 1945) is an American serial killer who murdered
at least ten people in Sedgwick County (in and around Wichita),
Kansas, between 1974 and 1991. He was known as the BTK killer
(or strangler), which stands for Bind, Torture,
and Kill, an apt description of his modus operandi.
Letters were written soon after the killings to police and to
local news outlets, boasting of the crimes and knowledge of
details. After a long hiatus, these letters resumed in 2004.
Biography
Dennis Lynn
Rader was born on March 9, 1945, the 1st of 4 brothers. He was
the son of William E. Rader and his wife, the former Dorothea M.
Cook. He grew up in Wichita and graduated from Riverview School
and later Wichita Heights High School. Rader attended Kansas
Wesleyan University in 1965–66 and then spent four years from
1966 to 1970 in the U.S. Air Force, including time in Texas,
Alabama, Okinawa, South Korea, Greece and Turkey.
When he
returned to the United States, he moved to Park City, a suburb
located seven miles north of Wichita. He worked for a time in
the meat department of Leekers IGA supermarket in Park City
where his mother was also a bookkeeper. He married Paula Dietz
on May 22, 1971. He attended Butler County Community College in
El Dorado, earning an Associate's Degree in Electronics in 1973.
He enrolled at Wichita State University that same fall. There he
graduated in 1979 with a bachelor's degree in Administration of
Justice.
From 1972 to
1973, Rader worked as an assembler for the Coleman Company, a
camping gear firm, as had 2 of BTK's early victims. From
November 1974 until being fired in July 1988, Rader worked at a
Wichita-based office of ADT Security Services, a company which
sold and installed alarm systems for commercial businesses
during Rader's years there. He held several positions, including
installation manager.
Rader was a
census field operations supervisor for the Wichita area in 1989
for three months, prior to the 1990 federal census.
Rader had
worked since 1991 as a supervisor of the Compliance Department
at Park City, a two-employee, multi-functional department in
charge of "animal control, housing problems, zoning, general
permit enforcement and a variety of nuisance cases." In this
position, neighbors recalled him as sometimes overzealous and
extremely strict; one neighbor complained that he euthanized her
dog for no reason.
On March 2,
2005, the Park City council terminated Rader's employment for
failure to report to work or to call in. (By this time, he was
detained by the authorities.)
Rader served
on both the Sedgwick County's Board of Zoning Appeals and the
Animal Control Advisory Board (appointed in 1996 and resigned in
1998). He was also a member of Christ Lutheran Church, a
Lutheran congregation of about 200 people. He had been a member
for about 30 years and had been elected president of the
Congregation Council. He was also a Cub Scout leader.
Dennis and
Paula are the parents of two adult children, Brian and Kerri.
Both were born after the BTK murders started.
On July 27,
2005, Sedgwick County District Judge Eric Yost waived the usual
60-day waiting period and granted an immediate divorce for Paula
Rader, agreeing that her mental health was in danger. Rader
didn't contest the divorce, and the 34-year marriage was ended.
Paula Rader said in her divorce petition that her mental and
physical condition has been adversely affected by the marriage.
She also contended that the couple was incompatible and that he
had failed to perform material marital duties and
obligations—possibly due to his incarceration.
Arrest and
conviction
On Friday,
February 25, 2005, Rader was detained near his home at 6220 61st
and Independence in Park City and accused of the BTK killings.
At a press conference the next morning, Wichita Police Chief
Norman Williams flatly asserted, "the bottom line is that BTK
has been arrested." Rader pled guilty to his crimes on June 27,
2005, giving a graphic, almost surreal account of his crimes in
court.
He was
sentenced to serve ten consecutive life sentences (one life
sentence per victim), without possibility of parole for 175
years, on August 18, 2005. This includes nine life sentences
each without the possibility for parole for 15 years, and one
life sentence without the possibility for parole for 40 years.
Modus
Operandi
Using personal
jargon for his killing equipment, Rader casually described his
victims as his "projects" and at one point likened the murders
of his victims to killing animals by saying he "put them down."
Rader created
what he called a "hit kit," a briefcase or bowling bag
containing the items he would use during murders: guns, tape,
rope and handcuffs. He also packed what he called "hit clothes"
that he would wear for the crimes and then dispose of.
Rader
developed a pattern for his murders. He would wander the city
until he found a potential victim. At that point, he would stalk
the person until he knew the pattern of their lives and when
would be the best time to strike. Rader often would stalk
multiple victims at a time, so he could continue the hunt if one
victim didn't work out. At the time of the murder, Rader would
break into the house, cut the phone lines, and hide until his
victim came home.
Rader would
often calm his victims by pretending to be a rapist who needed
to work out some sexual fantasies on them. This caused many of
his victims to be more cooperative and even help him, thinking
that once the rape was over, he would leave them alone. Instead,
Rader would kill them.
The name BTK,
chosen by Rader for himself, also dictated his methods. Rader
bound, tortured, and killed his victims. Rader would strangle
his victims until they lost consciousness, then let them revive,
then strangle them again. He would repeat the pattern over and
over again, forcing them to experience near-death, becoming
sexually aroused at the sight of their struggles. Finally, Rader
would strangle them to death and masturbate to ejaculation onto
the corpse.
Victims
Rader's
victims include:
1974: Four
members of one family (Joseph Otero, his wife Julie Otero, and
two of their five children: Joseph Otero II and Josephine Otero)
1974: Kathryn
Bright
1977: Shirley
Vian
1977: Nancy
Fox
1985: Marine
Hedge
1986: Vicki
Wegerle
1991: Delores
Davis
Police
officials say there is no reason to believe Rader was
responsible for any other murders. He collected items from the
scenes of the murders he committed and, reportedly, he had no
items that were related to any other killings. Nonetheless,
Rader cannot necessarily be ruled out as a suspect in other
cases.
Letters
Rader was
particularly known for sending taunting letters to police and
newspapers. There were several communications from BTK during
1974 to 1979. The first was a letter that had been stashed in an
engineering book in the Wichita Public Library in October 1974
that described in detail the killing of the Otero family in
January of that year.
In early 1978
he sent another letter to television station KAKE in Wichita
claiming responsibility for the murders of the Oteros, Shirley
Vian, Nancy Fox and another unidentified victim assumed to be
Kathryn Bright. He suggested a number of possible names for
himself, including the one that stuck: BTK. He demanded media
attention in this second letter, and it was finally announced
that Wichita did indeed have a serial killer at large. A poem
was enclosed entitled "Oh Death to Nancy".
In 1979 he
sent two identical packages, one to an intended victim who was
not at home when he broke into her house and the other to KAKE.
These featured another poem, "Oh Anna Why Didn't You Appear," a
drawing of what he had intended to do to his victim, as well as
some small items he had pilfered from Anna's home. Apparently,
Rader had waited for several hours inside the home of Anna
Williams on the 600 block of South Pinecrest. Not realizing that
she had gone to her sister's house for the evening, he
eventually got tired of the long wait and left.
All of Rader's
communications were poorly written with many misspellings and
incorrect grammar usage. It was theorized at times that the
writing style was a ruse to conceal his intelligence, but it
turns out Rader really does write that way in his everyday life
even though he earned a college degree in 1979.
In 1988, after
the murders of three members of the Fager family in Wichita, a
letter was received from someone claiming to be BTK in which he
denied being the perpetrator of this crime. He did credit the
killer with having done admirable work. It was never proven
until 2005 that this letter was a genuine BTK communication,
although BTK is not considered by police to have committed this
crime.
In March 2004,
he began the series of eleven communications from BTK that led
directly to his arrest in February 2005. The Wichita Eagle
newspaper received a letter from someone using the return
address Bill Thomas Killman.
The writer
claimed that he murdered Vicki Wegerle on September 16, 1986,
and enclosed photographs of the crime scene and a photocopy of
her driver's license, which had been stolen at the time of the
crime.
In May 2004 a
word puzzle was received by KAKE. In June a package was found
taped to a stop sign in Wichita containing graphic descriptions
of the Otero murders.
In July a
package was dropped into the return slot at the downtown public
library containing more bizarre material, including the claim
that he, BTK, was responsible for the death of 19-year-old Jake
Allen in Argonia, Kansas earlier that same month. This claim was
found to be false and the death remains ruled as a suicide.
In October
2004, a manila envelope was dropped into a UPS box in Wichita
containing a series of cards with images of terror and bondage
of children pasted on them. Also included was a poem threatening
the life of lead investigator Lt. Ken Landwehr and a false
autobiography giving many details about his life. These details
were later released to the public as though possibly factual,
but the police were mostly trying to encourage the killer to
continue to communicate until making a major mistake.
In December
2004, Wichita police received another package from the BTK
killer. This time the package was found in Wichita's Murdock
Park. It contained the driver's license of Nancy Fox, which was
noted as stolen at the scene of crime, as well as a doll that
was symbolically bound at the hands and feet with a plastic bag
tied over its head.
In January
2005, Rader attempted to leave a cereal box in the bed of a
pickup truck at a Home Depot in Wichita, but the box was at
first discarded by the owner. It was later retrieved from the
trash after Rader himself asked what had become of it in a later
message.
Surveillance
tape of the parking lot from that date revealed a distant figure
driving a black Jeep Cherokee leaving the box in the pickup.
In February
there were postcards to KAKE, and another cereal box left at a
rural location that contained another bound doll symbolizing the
murder of 11-year-old Josephine Otero. Rader asked the police
that if he put his writings onto a floppy disk if the disk could
be traced or not. He received his answer in a newspaper ad
posted in the Wichita Eagle saying it would be OK.
On February
16, 2005 he sent a floppy disk to Fox TV station KSAS in
Wichita. Forensic analysis quickly determined that the disk had
been used by the Christ Lutheran Church in Wichita, plus the
name Dennis. An internet search determined that Rader was
president of this church. He was arrested on February 25.
After his
arrest, Rader stated he chose to resurface in 2004 for various
reasons, including the release of the book Nightmare in
Wichita - the Hunt for the BTK Strangler by Robert Beattie.
He wanted the opportunity to tell his story his own way. He also
said he was bored because his children had grown up and he had
more time on his hands.
Example
The following
is a 1978 letter: "I find the newspaper
not writing about the poem on Vain unamusing. A little paragraph
would have enough. Iknow it not the media fault. The Police
Chief he keep things quiet, and doesn't let the public know
there a psycho running around lose strangling mostly women,
there 7 in the ground; who will be next?"
"How many do I
have to Kill before I get a name in the paper or some national
attention. Do the cop think that all those deaths are not
related? Golly -gee, yes the M.O. is different in each, but look
a pattern is developing. The victims are tie up-most have been
women-phone cut- bring some bondage mater sadist tendencies-no
struggle, outside the death spot-no wintness except the Vain's
Kids. They were very lucky; a phone call save them. I was go-ng
to tape the boys and put plastics bag over there head like I did
Joseph, and Shirley. And then hang the girl. God-oh God what a
beautiful sexual relief that would been. Josephine, when I hung
her really turn me on; her pleading for mercy then the rope took
whole, she helpless; staring at me with wide terror fill eyes
the rope getting tighter-tighter. You don't understand these
things because your not underthe influence of factor x). The
same thing that made Son of Sam, Jack the Ripper, Havery Glatman,
Boston Strangler, Dr. H.H. Holmes Panty Hose Strangler OF
Florida, Hillside Strangler, Ted of the West Coast and many more
infamous character kill. Which seem s senseless, but we cannot
help it. There is no help, no cure, except death or being caught
and put away. It a terrible nightmarebut, you see I don't lose
any sleep over it. After a thing like Fox I ccome home and go
about life like anyone else. And I will be like that until the
urge hit me again. It not continuous and I don;t have a lot of
time. It take time to set a kill, one mistake and it all over.
Since I about blew it on the phone-handwriting is out-letter
guide is to long and typewriter can be traced too,.My short poem
of death and maybe a drawing;later on real picture and maybe a
tape of the sound will come your way. How will you know me.
Before a murder or murders you will receive a copy of the
initials B.T.K. , you keep that copy the original will show up
some day on guess who?
"May you not
be the unluck one! P.S. How about some name for me, its time: 7
down and many more to go. I like the following How about you?
"'THE B.T.K.
STRANGLER', WICHITA STRANGLER', 'POETIC STRANGLER', 'THE BOND
AGE STRANGLER' OR PSYCHO' THE WICHITA HANGMAN THE WICHITA
EXECUTIONER, 'THE GAROTE PHATHOM', 'THE ASPHIXIATER'. B.T.K"
Arrest
The BTK
killer's last known communication with the media and police was
a padded envelope which arrived at FOX affiliate KSAS-TV in
Wichita on February 16, 2005. A purple, 1.44-MB Memorex floppy
disk was enclosed in the package. Also enclosed were a letter, a
photocopy of the cover of a 1989 novel about a serial killer (Rules
of Prey ISBN 0425195198) and a gold-colored necklace with a
large medallion. Police found metadata embedded in a Microsoft
Word document on the disk that pointed to Christ Lutheran
Church, and the document was marked as last modified by
"Dennis". A search of the church website turned up Dennis Rader
as president of the congregation council. Police immediately
began surveillance of Rader.
Sometime
during this period, police obtained a warrant for the medical
records of Rader's daughter, Kerri. A tissue sample seized at
this time was tested for DNA and provided a familial match with
semen at an earlier BTK crime scene. This, along with other
evidence gathered prior to and during the surveillance, gave
police probable cause for an arrest.
Rader was
stopped while driving near his home and taken into custody
shortly after noon on February 25, 2005. Immediately after, law
enforcement officials—including a Wichita Police bomb unit
truck, two SWAT trucks, and FBI and ATF agents—converged on
Rader's residence near the intersection of I-135 and 61st Street
North. Rader's home and vehicle were searched, and evidence
(including computer equipment, a pair of black pantyhose
retrieved from a shed, and a cylindrical container) was
collected. The church he attended, his office at City Hall and
the main branch of the Park City library were also searched that
day. Officers were seen removing a computer from his City Hall
office, but it is unclear if any evidence was found at these
locations.
Rader talked
to them for hours. He confessed right away. They filled up
twelve DVDs with his confession.
On February
26, 2005, The Wichita Police Department announced that they were
holding Dennis Lynn Rader as the prime suspect in the BTK
killings in a press conference. (transcript via The Wichita
Eagle)
Rader was
officially arrested on February 28, 2005.
Legal
proceedings
Kansas
reinstated the death penalty in 1994. The last known BTK killing
was in 1991, making all known BTK murders ineligible for the
death penalty. Even if later murders are linked to the BTK
killer, it was originally unclear whether the death penalty
would come into play, as the Kansas Supreme Court declared the
state's capital punishment law unconstitutional on December 17,
2004. The Sunday after his arrest, Associated Press reports
cited an anonymous source that Rader had confessed to other
killings in addition to the ones with which he was already
connected. Sedgwick County District Attorney Nola Foulston
called these reports "patently false." On March 5, news sources
claimed to have verified by multiple sources that Rader had
confessed to the ten murders he is charged with, but no
additional ones.
On March 1,
Rader was formally charged with ten counts of first degree
murder (AP via The Wichita Eagle). He made his first
appearance via videoconference from jail. He was represented by
a public defender. Bail was continued at $10 million.
On May 3,
District Court Judge Gregory Waller entered not guilty pleas to
the ten charges on Rader's behalf as Rader did not speak at his
arraignment.
On June 27,
the scheduled trial date, Dennis Rader changed his plea to
guilty. In a very calm manner he described, in detail, the
killings. He made no apologies. (Rader's Pleas online in
RealMedia format courtesy KWCH-TV.)
On August 18,
Dennis Rader faced sentencing. The victims' families made
statements, followed by Rader, who apologized for the crimes. He
was sentenced to ten consecutive life terms, which requires a
minimum of 175 years without a chance of parole. Kansas had no
death penalty at the time the killings were committed so this
was the maximum sentence allowed.
On August 19,
Rader was moved from the Sedgwick County Jail to the El Dorado
Correctional Facility, a Kansas state prison, to begin serving
his life sentence as inmate #0083707 with an earliest possible
release date of February 26, 2180. While going there, Rader
talked about the weather. But when Victims Families Statements
from a day before at his sentence hearing came on the radio,
Rader began to cry.
From April 23,
Rader has been allowed to watch television, listen to radio,
read magazines and have other privileges for good behavior. The
victims' families disagreed with this decision on the grounds
that he had previously used those media to explore sexual
fantasies.
According to
Rader's record in the Kansas Department of Corrections database,
he had a disciplinary report concerning mail on April 10, 2006.
Evidence
pertaining to the murders
Because Rader
did not contest his guilt, most evidence was not tested in
court. However, physical and circumstantial facts that would
have corroborated Rader as the BTK killer include:
DNA analysis
of BTK's semen and material taken from underneath the
fingernails of victim Vicki Wegerle match the DNA profile of
Dennis Rader.
Rader's
grammar and writing style matches letters and poems received
from BTK, though none of his communications were handwritten,
but typed, stenciled, stamped with a stamp set or computer
generated.
A pay phone
that the killer used to report a murder in 1977 was located a
few blocks from ADT Security (Rader's workplace at the time).
Rader had
attended Wichita State University in the 1970s. Wichita Police
Detective Arlyn G. Smith II and his partner George Scantlin
painstakingly traced BTK's photocopied communications to two
photocopy machines, one at Wichita State University and a second
copier at the Wichita Public Library. BTK murder victim Kathryn
Bright's brother Kevin, who was shot twice by BTK, reported that
the killer had asked him if he had seen him at the university. A
poem in one of the killer's letters was similar to a folk song
taught by a professor on that campus in that time period, though
Rader himself dismissed any connection.
Rader lived on
the same street as Marine Hedge, just houses away. The BTK
killer's other victims were in and around central Wichita,
except for his final victim Dolores (Dee) Davis, who lived a
half-mile east of Park City.
Two of the
victims (Julie Otero and Kathryn Bright) worked at the Coleman
Company, though not during the same period that Rader worked
there. Rader worked at Coleman only a short time and not at the
same location as the victims.
Semen found on
Josephine Otero or near the bodies of his victims Josephine
Otero, Shirley Vian and Nancy Fox was critical evidence linking
Rader to the crimes, and DNA obtained from fingernail scrapings
of Vicki Wegerle's left hand matched Rader's DNA, eliminating
any doubt that he was her murderer. Rader also sent trophies to
police in his letters, and others were discovered in his office.
Other cold cases in Kansas were reopened to see if Rader's DNA
matched crime scenes, but Rader's confession was limited to the
ten known victims and police and prosecutors do not believe
there were any more victims because of the extensive records and
memorabilia he kept on each of his victims.
Rader and
Joseph Otero, one of the first victims, both worked as Air Force
mechanics, but at different times and different locations. This
is thought to be a coincidence and not relevant to the murder.
Post-arrest notoriety and profit
On July 22,
2005, a controversy erupted on CNN's Nancy Grace show over a
poem that Dennis Rader had written that was passed on to someone
who then sold it on an auction site that specializes in serial
killer memorabilia. The poem was titled "Black Friday," an ode
to the day he was arrested. The poem expressed a point that
Dennis Rader was not happy about being caught, with one of the
verses proclaiming, "The dark side of me has been exposed."
NBC aired
Confessions of BTK. Robert Mendoza interviewed Rader after
he pleaded guilty on June 27. They claimed on the program that
Rader knew the interview might be on TV but that was a false
statement according to Sedgwick County Police. They thought it
was strange Mendoza recorded the interview with a camera. The
interview filming was conducted by a company owned by Omarosa
Manigault-Stallworth, a contestant on the NBC reality show
The Apprentice. Rader mentioned the interview during his
sentencing statement. On October 25, 2005, the Kansas Attorney
General filed a petition to sue Robert Mendoza and Tali Waters,
co-owners of Cambridge Forensic Consultants, LLC, for breach of
contract, claiming they intended to benefit financially from the
use of information obtained from involvement in Rader’s defense.
In popular culture
CBS aired
The Hunt for the BTK Killer, a made for TV movie October 9,
2005. The movie stars Robert Forster as the lead detective and
Gregg Henry as Dennis Rader. It had 9 million viewers.
A
direct-to-video movie, entitled B.T.K. Killer was
released in May 2006. Critics point to several inaccuracies in
the film, including incorrect timelines (the movie shows the BTK
murders happening in the 1960s, not the 1970s), and changed
premises (the movie shows Dennis Rader using animals and raw
meat to torture his victims, which investigators say never
happened).
A Law and
Order SVU episode based on BTK (where the killer is renamed
RDK) premiered the same week the real BTK was caught.
A
limited-release single was made by The Belgian Dark-wave Band
Suicide Commando which was entitled, Bind, Torture and Kill.
Books
Davis, Jeffrey
M. The Shadow of Evil: Where Is God in a Violent World?
Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company, 1996. (ISBN 0787219819) - Davis
is the son of BTK victim Dolores Davis.
Beattie,
Robert Nightmare In Wichita: The Hunt for the BTK Strangler
New American Library, March 30, 2005. (ISBN 0451217381)
Smith, Carlton
The BTK Murders : Inside the "Bind
Torture Kill" Case that Terrified America's Heartland
St. Martin's True Crime, March 7, 2006. (ISBN 0312939051)
Singular,
Stephen Unholy Messenger : The Life and Crimes of the BTK
Serial Killer Scribner Book Company, April 4, 2006. (ISBN
0743291247)
Douglas, John
E. Inside the Mind of BTK: Portrait of a Serial Killer
Jossey Bass Wiley, February 2, 2007 (ISBN 0787984841)
BTK Gets 10 Life
Sentences
August 19, 2005
BTK serial killer Dennis Rader was ordered to
serve 10 consecutive life terms Thursday during a tear-filled
hearing in which his victims called him a monster and said he should
be "thrown in a deep, dark hole and left to rot."
The sentence - a minimum of 175 years without a chance of parole -
was the longest possible that Judge Gregory Waller could deliver.
Kansas had no death penalty at the time the killings were committed.
The two-day hearing featured testimony from detectives who
graphically detailed the 10 killings and tearful relatives of the
victims. It culminated with rambling testimony from Rader, who said
he had been dishonest to his family and victims and at times wiped
his eyes.
"Nancy's death is a like a deep wound
that will never, ever heal," Beverly Plapp, sister of victim Nancy
Fox, testified. "As far as I'm concerned, Dennis Rader does not
deserve to live. I want him to suffer as much as he made his victims
suffer."
"This man needs to be thrown in a deep,
dark hole and left to rot," she said. "He should never, ever see the
light of day."
Rader offered Biblical quotes,
thanks to police and an apology to victims' relatives before Waller
sentenced him.
"A dark side is there, but now I
think light is beginning to shine," Rader said. "Hopefully someday
God will accept me."
Rader, 60, a former church
congregation president and Boy Scout leader, led a double life,
calling himself BTK for "bind, torture and kill." He was arrested in
February and pleaded guilty in June to the 10 murders from 1974 to
1991.
The family members who spoke called him a
coward, and they quietly sobbed.
"No remorse, no
compassion - he had no mercy," said Kevin Bright, the brother of
victim Kathryn Bright, who himself was shot but managed to flee. "I
think that's what he ought to receive."
Rader's
voice choked as he made a rambling, half-hour address to the
courtroom, saying he had been dishonest to his family and victims
and selfish.
"I know the victim's families will
never be able to forgive me. I hope somewhere deep down, eventually
that will happen," he said.
He also admitted he
tracked his victims "like a predator."
Nola
Foulston, Sedgwick County District Attorney, asked the judge that
Rader be refused anything in prison, such as markers or crayons,
that could be used to draw or write about human or animal forms, or
anything that might be used to further his sexual fantasies.
Prosecutors earlier flashed a photograph of Rader wearing the mask,
tied to a chair and donning a woman's blond wig. They also showed
other pictures the killer took in which he had bound himself and was
wearing a dress he had taken from a victim's house - apparently
reliving the ecstasy of the murder.