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Posteal LASKEY
During the killing spree there was considerable alarm
on the part of many Cincinnatians, with locksmiths and hardware stores
unable to keep up with the demand for locks.
Despite being charged with only one murder, the
citywide panic only abated after Laskey's arrest and conviction, when
the killings suddenly stopped, thus supporting investigators' claim that
they successfully found and jailed the Cincinnati Strangler.
Originally sentenced to death, Laskey's sentence was
commuted to life imprisonment when the Supreme Court invalidated the
death penalty in Furman v. Georgia. In February 2007, Laskey was
denied parole. The grounds cited by the Ohio Parole Board included the
heinous nature of the crime, Laskey's prior record and the community
disapproval of an early release.
He would have eligible for parole again in 2017 at
age 79 years old and was incarcerated in the Pickaway Correctional
Institution. Laskey died on
May 29, 2007
of natural causes, while still in prison. No one claimed his body and
prison officials said he was buried in one of the State of Ohio's prison
cemeteries.
Outrage grows to
release of killer
By Kimball Perry, Post
staff reporter
March 1, 2002
As he sped through Price Hill's rain-soaked streets
35 years ago to the scene of what he thought was a car wreck, Cincinnati
Patrolman Frank Sefton had no idea he would play a part in ending an
infamous crime spree linked to a killer dubbed the ''Cincinnati
Strangler.''
''That was a really gruesome scene up there,'' said
Sefton, who retired from the police department in 1987 and now works for
the city Office of Municipal Investigation.
At the intersection of Ring Place and Grand Avenue,
he saw a Yellow Cab in the middle of the street. Nearby on the pavement
lay Barbara Bowman, her clothes askew, her right foot almost severed,
her throat cut and bleeding profusely.
It would be nearly four months before police would
arrest Posteal Laskey for the crime, ending a string of assaults on
women that terrified the city.
Laskey was convicted and sent to prison in 1967; next
week, the now-64-year-old inmate will make another bid to the Ohio
Parole Board for freedom, this time after 35 years behind bars.
''They were terrified,'' Sefton said of the public
after Ms. Bowman's killing. ''The locksmiths and the hardware stores
couldn't keep locks in stock. There was a huge demand for them. ...
Because of the hysteria, everybody was absolutely petrified.''
Laskey was sentenced to death, but that was commuted
to life in 1972 when the death penalty was ruled unconstitutional.
Hamilton County Prosecutor Mike Allen wants the
Parole Board to know that there is still strong opposition to Laskey's
release.
''Purely and simply, he's a serial killer, and unless
the Parole Board knows something we don't, serial killers shouldn't be
let out,'' Allen said. ''He got a break once when it was commuted in
1972.''
Although he was convicted of just one murder, police
were convinced Laskey committed at least six others.
Ms. Bowman, a 31-year-old single secretary, left the
Lark Cafe, 3001 Vine St., at 2:15 a.m. on Aug. 14, 1966, in a cab driven
by a short, thin black man.
Laskey had previously worked for Yellow Cab and using
a master key he'd had made, stole cab No. 870.
After Ms. Bowman's murder was reported, two people
told policethey had stopped and asked a man and woman in that cab for
directions.
Police suspect that scaredLaskey so much that he
stabbed and choked Ms. Bowman and, when she tried to flee, ran over her
with the cab.
''The viciousness of what he did to her that night
was unbelievable,'' Sefton said.
''I asked a man standing there to help me and he
threw up it was so bad.''
Ms. Bowman had been stabbed seven times in the neck,
raped, and strangled - perhaps with the pearl necklace she wore.
As Laskey tried to drive the cab away from the scene,
it hit a street sign, breaking a tie-rod, affecting the ability to steer.
He hailed another cab and got away.
Laskey had been interviewed by police during the
crime spree, but they had no proof of his guilt. He was a suspect
because of his conviction - he served four years in prison - for an
earlier assault that bore a chilling resemblance to the string of 1966
attacks.
Still unable to put a name on the face, police were
baffled as to who was killing, beating and raping women - mostly elderly
ones.
Police finally got the break they needed after
someone saw the license number of a man who forced his way into a West
Court Street apartment on Dec. 8 and tried to assault the woman who
lived there.
The next day, using that license plate number,
officers arrested Laskey.
Even though Cincinnati had 16 homicide detectives at
that time, so many others were called in from other areas, Sefton said,
that 54 detectives were on the case when Laskey was caught.
Sefton has little sympathy for Laskey and doesn't
care if a sick old man who has served 35 years in prison wants to be
freed.
''You want to take a risk of letting him out? With
these sexual serial killers, you just can't predict what they will do,''
Sefton said.
''If it was just Bowman, her case alone would be
enough to keep him in for life. There's no question people like that
shouldn't be let out.''
The killer blew his first attempt, on October 12,
1965, when he beat and raped a 65-year-old woman, failing in his effort
to strangle her with a length of plastic clothesline. Two months later,
on December 2, his weapon was the same, employed to strangle Emogene
Harrington in the basement of her own apartment building. Police linked
the two crimes in theory, but the panic was yet to come.
On April 4, 1966, 58-year-old Lois Dant was raped and
strangled in her first-floor Cincinnati apartment. Two months later, on
June 10, 56-year-old Jeannette Messer was found in a city park, raped
and strangled with a necktie.
On October 12, Mrs. Carl Hochhausler, 51, was found
by her daughter in the family garage, beaten, raped and strangled to
death by an unknown assailant. Eight days later, in a crime that police
called "an exact copy" of the previous murders, 81-year-old Rose
Winstsel was savagely beaten in her home, strangled with the electric
cord of a heating pad. Authorities were less certain in the death of
octogenarian Lula Kerrick, found in the elevator of her apartment
building on December 9. The strangulation looked familiar, granted, but
she had not suffered sexual assault.
A few days later, suspect Posteal Laskey was arrested
and charged with the "similar" slaying of a seventh victim, Barbara
Bowman. Convicted and sentenced to life for that crime, Laskey was never
charged in the other stranglings, but police remain confident of his
guilt, an assumption seemingly supported by the abrupt cessation of
murders after his arrest.