Police discovered that one victim —John LaMay, 17—had
been seen in the company of two homosexuals: Patrick Kearney, 37, an
electronics engineer for the Hughes Aircraft Co., and his roommate,
David Hill, 34, unemployed. In May, as the investigation went on,
Kearney quit his job and took off with Hill for El Paso, Texas, where
they went into hiding. But last week the two men were arraigned for
murder. They had calmly walked into a sheriffs office in Riverside,
Calif., and pointed to their photographs on a nearby wanted poster. Said
Hill: "We're them."
Beyond Recovery. Kearney later took police to six
sites near the California-Mexico border where, authorities said, "he may
have disposed of bodies." At week's end, police had recovered twelve,
and said that Kearney and Hill might be responsible in all for 28 or
more killings, which would make the case the largest mass murder in
American history. Says Lieut. Edward Douglas of the Los Angeles sheriffs
department: "I don't know if we'll ever know the total, because some
bodies may be beyond recovery."
An affidavit filed in the case states that a bloody
hack saw was found at the Kearney-Hill apartment in Redondo Beach. The
apartment also yielded hair samples and bloodstains that match those of
the victim LaMay, whose body —according to the affidavit—was discovered
in a plastic bag taken from the Hughes Aircraft Co.
Police say that the two men preyed on boys and young
men, some of them apparently male prostitutes, who frequented homosexual
cruising areas like Selma Avenue in Hollywood and MacArthur Park in Los
Angeles. Says Lieut. Douglas, "We have no indication of what the motive
was." Other than the fact that some of the victims, at least, were
homosexuals, they appeared to have little in common.
For the nation's homosexuals, still smarting from the
successful anti-gay rights drive of Anita Bryant in Miami, the news of
the California murders came at a bad time. The Bryant group had argued
that many male homosexuals prey on the young—and indeed some of the
California victims were teenagers. What was more, the press began
rehashing the sex-thrill murders of 27 youths by three Texas homosexuals
in 1973 —still the largest proved mass murder in America.
Robert Gould, professor of psychiatry at New York
Medical College, estimates that the number of murders committed by
homosexuals is probably no greater, proportionately, than those
committed by heterosexuals. But he adds: "When it's a homosexual who
kills ten people or twelve, or whatever, the headline is HOMOSEXUAL
KILLS. It sticks in your mind. You never get the headline HETEROSEXUAL
KILLS".
The questions raised by the case about the problems
of homosexual relationships sharply divide psychiatrists, as well as
psychologists. Are homosexuals any more given to aggression than the
rest of the population? Most analysts think not. Says Judd Marmor, past
president of the American Psychiatric Association: "I don't think there
is anything inherent in homosexuality that makes them disturbed people."
But some experts think that homosexuals may be more
prone to pathology. Says Psychiatrist Gould: "I think you will find more
disturbed homosexuals. The extra fillip of pathology in the homosexual
is due to cultural opposition and discrimination." Others believe that a
male homosexual sex relationship has more potential for aggression,
simply because both partners are male; the blend of sex and male-to-male
rivalry can be explosive.
On one point most observers are agreed: homosexuals
are more vulnerable to physical attack because accepting sexual
invitations from total strangers is an established part of the gay scene.
Says Berkeley Psychologist Michael Evans: "Homosexuals are an easy
population to get access to in some anonymous way." Chicago Police Sgt.
Richard Sandberg puts it more tersely: "The gays are easy prey".