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David A. DOWLER
Moving to Odessa, Texas, in 1981, he quickly
found work as a sales representative for a local oil company.
Beneath the polished surface, though, there was another side to
David Dowler. He regaled selected friends with tales of contract
killings, posing as a former secret agent who had "taken out six
guys" on various assignments for the government.
Acquaintances took Dowler's stories with a
grain of salt, but there was no denying that he seemed to have a
sixth sense for predicting danger. On the morning of August 16,
1983, Dowler telephoned the father of Lisa Krieg, a 26-year-old
coworker, to say that Lisa was late for work. Dowler was worried,
and he could think of no one else to call. Stopping by his
daughter's flat, the man found Lisa dead, stretched out across her
bed and partially undressed. Her death was attributed to
long-standing anorexia nervosa, but Dowler had a different story
for his intimates, involving spies who had, for no apparent
reason, tried to kill the woman several times before.
In Dowler's version of events, he found the
victim nude and partly dressed the corpse, to make her death "look
natural," before he called her father to investigate. Dowler had
his next premonition of doom on February 12, 1986.
It concerned Juan Casillas, Dowler's partner in
a one-hour photo developing service, and he called Leza Chandler,
Casillas' ex-wife, to say he was "worried about Juan." Stopping by
her ex-husband's apartment, Chandler found him dead on the kitchen
floor. An autopsy revealed traces of drugs in his system, but they
were not identified. Leza Chandler, herself, was the target of
Dowler's next "premonition," on June 28, 1987. Phoning up another
female friend, he asked if she would check on Chandler, "just in
case."
The woman found Leza dead in bed, her infant
daughter crawling aimlessly around her mother's body on the
mattress. Medical examiners ascribed her death to acute chloroform
poisoning, and the search for a killer began. By this time,
friends and homicide investigators were becoming curious about
Dowler's "sixth sense." His lady friend agreed to wear a
microphone to several meetings with the suspect, in July, taping
hours of conversation on espionage, assassination... and the
various uses of chloroform.
Dowler was arrested for Leza Chandler's murder
on August 20, a search of his apartment netting chloroform
bottles, a .22-caliber pistol, and two homemade silencers. Held in
lieu of $100,000 bond, he was formally indicted on September 8.
While Dowler cooled his heels in jail, renewed forensic tests on
Lisa Krieg and Juan Casillas turned up lethal dosages of cyanide
in both.
Dowler was indicted for their murders in
December 1987, while police examined circumstances in the death of
Dorothy Nesbitt, another Dowler acquaintance who died mysteriously
in November 1986. (No charges have been filed in Nesbitt's death.)
At trial, in January 1988, the prosecutor
described Dowler as someone who "likes to be the power that snuffs
out life. He likes that supreme power." The jury agreed,
convicting Dowler of first-degree murder on January 27.
With two trials pending, he was sentenced to as
term of life imprisonment.
Michael Newton - An Encyclopedia of Modern
Serial Killers
MO: Killed three acquaintances with
cyanide/chloroform after having "premonitions" of their deaths.