Howard Milton Belcher, 26, was formally charged with
the Oct. 5, 2002, death of Mark Schaller, a 40-year-old gay man who
lived in an upscale condo on Dutch Valley Road off Monroe Drive. In June,
Belcher was sentenced to life in prison plus 20 years for the murder of
a gay Paulding County man on Oct. 10, 2002.
“We would characterize Belcher as a serial killer,”
said Erik Friedly, public affairs director for the Fulton County
District Attorney. “He’s suspected in a number of murders.”
Robbery apparently motivated Belcher during an
alleged killing spree in October 2002, a month-long affair that started
with meeting victims at or near Bulldogs, a Peachtree Street gay bar
popular among African-American men, according to authorities.
Belcher also faces murder charges in the death of
Leroy Tyler, a 27-year-old gay man found in his Clarkston apartment Oct.
5, 2002. Belcher is a suspect in the Oct. 28 death of Artilles McKinney,
a 35-year-old gay Duluth man, authorities said.
Fulton prosecutors decided against seeking the death
penalty against Belcher for his alleged role in the Schaller slaying,
and instead are pursuing a sentence of life in prison without the
possibility of parole, Friedly said.
Belcher described himself as an HIV-positive
prostitute during interviews with the Atlanta Police Department,
according to Det. Vincent Velazquez. He frequented Bulldogs and the area
around the bar to meet tricks, Velazquez added.
Belcher’s arrest unfolded Oct. 30, 2002, when police
in College Park stopped Belcher while he was driving a 1994 Lexus.
Police discovered the car’s owner, Artilles McKinney, dead in his
townhouse a day earlier. Authorities have said Belcher and McKinney met
Oct. 28 a few blocks from Bulldogs and later traveled to McKinney’s home.
Forensic evidence later proved inconclusive and has
kept authorities from charging Belcher in McKinney’s death, authorities
said.
But as the case against Belcher expanded after his
arrest, investigators sought possible links between him and other
unsolved homicides. Prosecutors in Paulding County were the first to
press formal charges against Belcher, who faced a six-day trial last
June for the death of Matthew Abney, 45, a gay assistant manager for Wal-Mart.
Belcher told investigators he met Abney at Bulldogs
and the pair traveled to Abney’s home, according to Tom Melanson, a
Paulding County assistant district attorney.
The pair had sex before Belcher strangled him and
took jewelry and his car. Abney’s hands were bound with a necktie, he
was partially dressed, and a gas oven was left on, Melanson said.
In a letter to investigators, Belcher said Abney died
while the two men had sex; during trial, Belcher said a third man was in
the home and killed Abney, Melanson said.
“We argued that [Belcher] turned the burners on so
that it would blow the place up and destroy evidence,” Melanson said.
“It appeared to be a signature — like his calling card.”
Schaller was found partially nude with his hands
bound by a necktie and died of blunt force injury to the neck. A gas
oven in his condo was also turned on and his cell phone and wallet were
reported missing, police said. Velazquez said Schaller and Belcher
apparently met near Bulldogs.
Belcher also faces charges in the Feb. 24, 2002
robbery and kidnapping of two Atlanta men who were found with their
hands bound by neckties, authorities said.
DeKalb County authorities charged Belcher with
Tyler’s death last July. Tyler was found Oct. 5, 2002, after being
strangled with his hands tied. Police discovered Tyler’s body in his
Clarkston apartment bedroom under a comforter. His car was taken and the
stove was turned on, authorities said.