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Paul
Eugene ROWLES
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics: Serial rapist
Number of victims: 1 - 3 +
Date of murders: March 29, 1972 / February 9, 1989 / March 15,
1992
Date of birth: April 28, 1948
Victims profile:
Linda Fida, 20 / Tiffany Sessions, 20 / Elizabeth Foster, 21
A look at Paul Rowles' background and criminal
past
By WFLA.com
February 5, 2014
Paul Rowles, who is deceased and a reported suspect
in the 1989 disappearance and possible murder of Tiffany Sessions, has
a violent criminal record.
Information from the TiffanySessions.com website
details events in Rowles' life and what appears to be evidence linking
Rowles to the disappearance of Sessions and other crimes.
Rowles was born in 1948. At the age of 8, the
website says Rowles choked a cat to death. At age 12, he developed
rape fantasies involving women. His father beat him unconscious on
several occasions. Rowles also broke into several apartments to steal
victim's underwear and occasionally wore bras and women's underwear,
according to the site.
Rowles married Linda Schaeffer in 1970 when he was
20-years old. While he was married to Schaeffer, the website says
Rowles confessed to the 1972 murder of Linda Ida, a woman who lived in
his apartment complex.
In March of 1973, Schaeffer divorced Rowles.
Side-by-side photographs document Tiffany Sessions' resemblance to
Rowles' first wife, Linda Schaeffer.
In March of 1976, Rowles was sentenced to life in
prison for the murder of Linda Ida. He was paroled and moved to
Pinellas County in December of 1985.
In April of 1988, Rowles moved to Gainesville,
according to the TiffanySessions.com website. Tiffany Sessions, age
20, was reported missing on Feb. 9, 1989. Her body was never located.
On March 15, 1992, Elizabeth Foster was reported
missing. Her body was found 11 days later in Gainesville. In 2013,
detectives used DNA evidence to link Rowles to Foster's murder. Rowles
was never charged with her murder, according to a report on
TheTallahasseeNews.com.
In May of 1992, Rowles moved to Jacksonville. In
January of 1994, Rowles kidnapped a Clearwater girl. He later
confessed to the kidnapping and sexual assault of the girl.
Photos on the TiffanySessions.com website show what
appears to be evidence collected in the case against Rowles. A
photograph shows Rowles' address book, which documented information
about his victims. Included in the address book is a handwritten
notation that says "#2 2/9/89" which is the day Tiffany Sessions
disappeared.
The Florida Department of Corrections website
chronicles Rowles' criminal history
In March of 1976, Rowles was sentenced to serve
life in prison for first degree murder. The murder happened in March
of 1972 in Miami-Dade County. Rowles was released from prison in
December of 1985, according to Florida Dept. of Corrections records.
In July of 1994, Rowles was sentenced to 91 months
in prison for a crime that occurred in January of 1994 in Duvall
County. He was convicted of two counts of sexual battery, one count of
lewd and lascivious indecent assault on a child, and forced sexual
battery.
In June of 1995, Rowles was sentenced to 10 months
in prison for a crime that occurred in January of 1994 in Pinellas
County. He was found guilty of armed burglary.
In February of 2013, Florida Dept. of Corrections
records show that Rowles was "out of custody," which is presumably the
day he died at age 64.
Rowles is listed on the Florida Department of Law
Enforcement Sexual Offender website.
Student’s killer dies untried in prison as story
of guilt and heroism unfolds from justice system
By Jack Strickland - TheTallahasseeNews.com
April 02, 2013
Paul Eugene Rowles is dead. If he is missed at all,
he will be missed by very few people.
Records show he died on February 12, 2013 at a
Florida prison near Miami. Reporters discovered his death this week
when they checked on a pending Gainesville murder and rape case
against Rowles. The Florida Department of Corrections, Citing HIPPA
laws, declined to disclose the cause of death or give any details.
Rowles was 64.
In September of last year newly analyzed DNA
evidence identified Rowles as the murderer of a Gainesville college
student. The murder took place in 1992. Twenty-one year old Elizabeth
Foster, a student at Santa Fe Community College, disappeared from a
park three miles from the university of Florida campus. Her room mates
reported that she had gone to the park, alone, to study.
Eleven days later Foster’s badly beaten body was
discovered in a shallow grave on the rim of Paynes Prairie. The
makeshift grave was about a mile from the park where she was last seen
alive. The medical examiner determined she had been raped.
There were no significant leads. Three days after
her disappearance, Foster’s blue Honda CRX was discovered, abandoned,
across highway 441 from the location where her body was ultimately
found.
The car had been left in the parking lot of the
Brown Derby Restaurant, a popular upscale steak house that had been
closed for several months. Close by was the Sid Martin Bridge House, a
residential drug treatment center. There was speculation that the
killer might be a drug addict seeking treatment from the facility.
There were no creditable leads or ties to anyone.
The case went cold. No suspects or persons of serious interest were
immediately disclosed.
Last year forensics evidence in the case was
reexamined using newly developed, state of the art, science and
equipment that was not available at the time of the murder. New DNA
fingerprinting and testing confirmed a match with evidence found on
Foster’s body with available known hairs and specimens.
Paul Eugene Rowles was positively identified as the
rapist and murderer. He was a Florida State prisoner who was serving a
life sentence imposed in 1972 for first degree murder and an
additional 101 years for several crimes committed in 1994.
Those crimes involved kidnapping and sexual
battery. Some of those sentences were imposed concurrently. When he
died, Rowles’ total sentence seemed to be life plus 65 years.
In 1985, he had been released on parole from the
1972 life sentence. He was at liberty on parole in 1992 when Foster
was killed.
Rowles was never formally charged with Foster’s
murder. When he died law enforcement agencies were meticulously
crossing every “t” and dotting every “i” in the preparation of the
case against him. There was no room for error, this time, in bringing
the killer of Elizabeth Foster to justice.
In 1999 an innocent man was charged, indicted, and
almost wrongly convicted of the murder of Elizabeth Foster.
George E. Taylor, a Wisconsin prisoner from Ormond
Beach, Florida, was previously charged with Foster’s murder. He was
arrested by Alachua County authorities. He was extradited to Florida
where, in 1999, a grand jury indited him for Foster’s murder.
Elizabeth Foster’s parents, Richard and Helen
Foster, were brought to Gainesville from their home in Montville, new
Jersey to be present when the Grand Jury indictment against Taylor was
read.
The case against Taylor appeared strong. It was
documented he had been in Jacksonville, 70 miles from the scene of the
crime, in 1992 at the time of Foster’s murder. He was serving a
sixty-five year sentence in Wisconsin for raping a 24- year-old
Wisconsin college student.
A “jail house snitch” in Wisconsin gave a sworn
affidavit saying he had heard Taylor brag about raping and killing
Foster in Gainesville.
Before a different judge, Taylor may have been
tried, convicted, and sentenced to death. Under the circumstances, he
stood very little chance of proving his innocence before a jury
coached by an effective prosecutor. Taylor seemed to be on his way to
Death Row at Raiford to pay the debt to society for Foster’s murder.
Veteran court watchers expected him to keep a date
with the executioner.
But, the Gainesville judge who drew Taylor’s case
assignment was The Honorable Maurice Guinta, a no nonsense judge, who
was a stickler for the law. He found no probable cause to bring Taylor
to trial.
In a very unpopular decision, he threw the case out
of court. Taylor was returned to Wisconsin to finish serving his
sentence, there, as the investigation against him in Florida
continued. He is eligible for parole in Wisconsin on January 19, 2017.
If there is a hero in the Foster case it is Judge
Guinta. He prevented a grave miscarriage of justice and probably saved
an innocent man from execution. Of course, new DNA fingerprinting
should also be saluted. Without it . no one but George Taylor and Paul
Rowels would know that Taylor did not kill “Betsy” Foster. Nor would
we have undisputed proof of Judge Guinta’s wisdom.
DNA testing has changed the dynamics of America’s
criminal justice system. It has demonstrated how flawed the court
system has been in determining guilt or innocence. DNA fingerprint
identification is a breakthrough forensic tool. It is a modern day
blessing that can protect the innocent and hold the guilty
accountable.
DNA fingerprinting identified, at long last, the
killer of Elizabeth Foster and gave her family and friends closure. It
also exonerated an innocent man and keeps George Taylor from having to
look over his shoulder in fear of an unwarranted visit from the
hangman.
On the trail of a serial killer
The 1989 murder investigation of a then 20-year-old
Tiffany Sessions of Miami-Dade is a tapestry of the uncertain, the
infuriating, and the heartbreaking.
By Glenn Garvin - MiamiHerald.com
April 26, 2014
In all the agony and exhaustion and ennui of 25
years of searching for his lost daughter, Tiffany, Patrick Sessions
still remembers the exact chilling moment that foretold what he was
really up against. Just a few months after Tiffany vanished while
taking a walk near her Gainesville apartment, her real-estate
developer father had convened a meeting of half a dozen or so
frustrated investigators — cops, private detectives, forensic
psychologists — who had fruitlessly been chasing the few, fleeting
clues in the case.
“We were still wrestling with the question of was
there any logic to this,” Pat Sessions recalls. “Had it been done by
somebody she turned down for a date? Was it somebody I had fired or
somebody who didn’t like me and was seeking revenge? Or was it some
drifter who came in off the highway and then left again?
“One of the guys there was from the FBI behavorial
analysis unit in Quantico, Virginia. He listened to us for a while,
and finally he interrupted. ‘We know of at least 50 serial killers out
there,’ he said. ‘We have no idea where they are or what they’re doing
or why they’re doing it. And any one of them could have taken
Tiffany.’ And I just sat there, frozen, not knowing what to think or
say.”
The Sessions investigators didn’t know it, but they
were already groping their way along the trail of a serial killer. Its
faint outlines wouldn’t become apparent for more than two decades and
its end still hasn’t been reached.
Police two months ago declared the case solved
after they discovered what appeared to be a coded reference to her
death in an old address book belonging to Paul Rowles, a sexually
tormented serial killer who died of lung cancer in a South Florida
prison hospital a year earlier.
Rowles was convicted of one murder, more than 40
years ago in Miami, and shortly before he died was conclusively linked
by DNA evidence to another, in Gainesville. A third victim narrowly
escaped death, running naked from his Jacksonville apartment after
being kidnapped and raped. His address book contains notes on two of
those victims, as well as the apparent reference to Tiffany.
But police haven’t closed the investigation and are
still pursuing leads — digging up suspected grave sites, patrolling
deserted fields with cadaver dogs, hunting for Tiffany’s jewelry and a
vehicle that may have transported her body, even searching homes. The
information they found in Rowles’ address book, though compelling,
falls well short of certitude. It probably wouldn’t even be enough to
charge him if he were still alive.
“Our case is circumstantial,” admits Kevin Allen,
the Alachua County Sheriff’s Office cold-case detective who’s running
the investigation. “But it’s significantly circumstantial. The fact
that he documented two other victims alongside the reference to
Tiffany is highly significant.
“He’s by far the most significant suspect ever
identified in the case.... If we could just find the wristwatch she
was wearing when she disappeared and tie it to him, or find her DNA in
his old vehicle, that would close the final link.”
For Allen, the continuing investigation into a
25-year-old disappearance where there’s no hope of either saving the
victim or punishing the culprit is an effort to close that final link.
For Tiffany’s parents — who accept without reservation the
identification of Rowles as her killer — there’s a much simpler reason
to keep looking.
“I don’t want Tiffy out in a field, under a tree or
a rock,” her mother Hilary says. “I want her back, even it it’s just
one bone. I want to give her a Christian burial and know she’s come
home.”
Until then, investigators will continue charting
the trail of Paul Rowles. Their search, as pieced together by the
Miami Herald through interviews with police, prosecutors, and victims,
as well as hundreds of pages of court documents and police reports, is
a tapestry of the uncertain, the infuriating, and the heartbreaking.
For every Aha! moment there are a dozen Oh no! moments. There have
been heroes, to be sure, but mostly there have been victims
LINDA SHAFFER
The trail begins in 1969 in St. Petersburg, where
pretty blonde Linda Shaffer and one of her girlfriends were driving a
downtown street that was a regular weekend cruising spot for local
college kids like them. To their surprise, a lean young blond guy with
a tousled surfer look boldly jumped into the back seat.
His name was Paul Rowles, he said, he was 21 — just
a few months older than Linda, who was nearing her 21st birthday — and
he worked in the restaurant in the Holiday Inn. Taken with his brash
charm, Linda gave him her phone number.
Perhaps, if she had known more about him, she
wouldn’t have. Rowles grew up in Pennsylvania in a home that was
irretrievably broken even if all the pieces were still clustered
together.
His mother, a nurse, had a nervous breakdown
following a hysterectomy and was in and out of mental hospitals the
rest of her life, sometimes undergoing what doctors now call
electroconvulsive therapy but in those days was known as shock
treatment. His father, who worked in the steel mills, had a drinking
problem, a hitting problem and, eventually, a problem with life
itself. He tried to hang himself, but the rope broke.
Paul was kicked out of the house at age 18, but he
took some serious scars with him. He would later tell court-appointed
psychiatrists that he started fantasizing about raping women and
torturing them with hot curling irons when he was just 12. He peeped
at windows. Sometimes he tried on women’s bras and panties; other
times he stole them from the closet of friends’ mothers and chopped
them up and burned them.
Even before his obsessions turned obviously sexual,
Paul had a fascination with violence. At age 8, he told one
psychiatrist, he tried to strangle a cat. During that same interview,
in 1994, Paul freely discussed his sexual abberations and violent
fantasies, his murder and attempted rape of one woman and his
kidnapping and sexual molestation of a teenager. Noted the
psychiatrist in his report: “The only time he sheds any tears is when
he discusses the cat.”
But Linda would learn of Paul’s darker side only
much later. For now, she was delighted that he called to take her to
dinner and gave her an expensive handbag for her birthday. Soon they
were seeing each other several times a week.
Linda didn’t return calls from the Miami Herald.
But in conversations with friends and interviews with police, she said
she loved the way he was affectionate without being sexually
demanding. He was “old-fashioned,” he said, and would never be
unfaithful; what he was searching for was “stability.”
Apparently he found it. Their relationship not only
survived but flourished in 1970 as Linda moved to Atlanta for five
months of flight-attendant training from Delta Airlines. She was
assigned to fly out of Miami; they moved to Hialeah, where Paul played
tennis and attended junior-college classes while Linda flew, and doted
on her when she was home.
The only thing Linda found odd was the scarcity of
their sex life. Even in the high passion of a new romance, Paul wanted
sex only once a week. Soon it was once a month, then not all.
Relatively sexually inexperienced herself, she thought perhaps she was
doing something wrong.
But it didn’t seem to cast a pall over their
relationship. Things got more serious, and after moving to Miami, they
married at a nearby Lutheran church. The minister, Joe Nilsen, became
their closest friend.
One morning in April 1972, Linda called Nilsen.
“Open your newspaper,” she said. Nilsen didn’t have to guess which
story she wanted him to read; it was the one with the headline BANDAGE
LED TO SUSPECT, the one that reported Paul was under arrest for
murder.
LINDA FIDA
No criminal in his right mind would have picked the
Robin Hood Apartments, a small complex on Northwest Second Avenue in
North Miami, to commit a murder. The buildings’ occupants, mostly
rising young professionals, included seven cops, two newspaper
reporters and a prosecutor. No crime committed there would go
unnoticed or uninvestigated.
And the security was pretty good, too. The
apartment of real-estate agent Joseph Fida and his wife Linda, for
example, had a sturdy Yale lock, a deadbolt latch and two chain locks.
The Fidas were typical of the Robin Hood’s bright-eyed,
just-getting-started tenants: He was attending the University of
Miami’s ROTC program by day, training to be a U.S. Navy pilot after
graduation, while selling real estate at night. Linda, a beauty queen
— second place in the Miss North Miami pageant two years earlier, was
doing secretarial work.
“I guess life was stacking up pretty well for us,”
Joseph Fida mused last week from his home in Kansas City. “I had a
good marriage — less than a year earlier, we were still newly-weds — a
good career, a new car. We were moving toward the American dream.
Obviously, all that changed.”
Despite all those boisterous cops barbecuing their
dinners in the courtyard most nights, despite all those locks, someone
got into the Fidas’ apartment early in the evening of March 31, 1972
and murdered Linda. Joseph found her naked body, head underwater, in
the bathtub, stab wounds in her breast, when he came home from work
that night.
Laundry scattered around the living room, flecked
with blood but otherwise clean, offered a clue about how she was
killed — surprised while returning from a downstairs washing machine —
and two abandoned Band-Aids offered one about who did it. Each was
molded into a circular shape, like a ring, as if they had been wrapped
around something about the size of a big toe. And clearly embedded in
the adhesive part of one of the bandages were the sharp ridges and
whorls of a toe print.
The police who flooded into the Robin Hood after
Joseph Fida’s frantic call didn’t make much progress the first night;
nobody had seen anything. But the next night, one of the Fidas’
downstairs neighbors called James Woodard, an assistant state attorney
who lived in the complex and whose apartment had been turned into a
command post for the investigation.
“There’s somebody in the aparment upstairs! I can
hear them!” exclaimed the young woman. “Isn’t it all sealed with
crime-scene tape? Could the killer have come back?”’
Woodard promised to check, then asked if the woman
had a safe place to wait. Yes, she said, giving the apartment number
of a married couple who lived elsewhere in the complex. Woodard
hurried toward the murder scene, where he found the door ajar. Inside
he saw a cop accompanying the widowed Joseph Fida, who was packing
some of his wife’s clothing to take to the funeral home.
Relieved, Woodard went to the apartment where the
alarmed neighbor had gone to wait. She opened the door, and introduced
him to her friends: a married couple relatively new to the complex
from Hialeah, Paul Rowles and Linda Shaffer. Woodard quickly explained
that everything was okay, then hurried away before his face gave
anything away: On Paul’s sandaled feet, his big toes were wrapped in
Band-Aids.
“It didn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out he
was probably the guy who did it,” recalled Woodard, now in private
practice in Coconut Grove, last week. “I called the police and said,
‘I think I’ve got your man.’”
A couple of days later, after obtaining Paul’s toe
prints with a ruse and matching one to the print in the Band-Aid,
police arrested him. He was quiet, but Linda Shaffer wasn’t. “I don’t
even want to repeat what she said, strong language and bad names,”
remembers Marshall Frank, the now retired homicide investigator who
arrested him. “She thought we were bullying him. Saying stuff like ‘He
would never, ever do a thing like this, you’ll see, you’ll see.’”
Her rage didn’t last long. It took homicide
investigator Marshall Frank less than an hour to obtain Paul’s full
confession. As he would in another case more than a decade later, when
confronted with overwhelming evidence against him, Paul crumbled.
“We weren’t browbeating him or causing him any
stress,” Frank says. “We talked for a while about other stuff, things
he liked to do, just conversation. Then I said, ‘Look, tell me about
the urges. We understand how you feel, other people have urges too,
it’s not just you.’
“He told me it started when he was a kid, that he’d
been close to attacking women before, he’d actually gone out to attack
women, but something had always happened to stop it. In particular, he
told me about being in an elevator with a girl, and he was just ready
to jump when she said something nice and it turned him off.”
Even so, Paul insisted, he had intended only to
rape Linda Fida, not kill her. Peering from the peephole of his
apartment, right across a passageway from hers, he watched her walk up
and down the stairs carrying laundry. When she left the last time, he
slipped across the hall to try her door and found it unlocked. He
waited behind it and jumped her when she returned. As he tore her
clothing off, he held some of the laundry over her face so she
couldn’t see him.
“Instead of trying to keep from getting choked, she
got the clothes off her face to see who it was,” Paul said as a police
stenographer took down his words. “Then I know she knew what I looked
like and I kind of went out of control...Things went a little fuzzy.”
He choked her with his hands, stabbed her with one
knife until the blade bent, went to the kitchen to get another,
stabbed her some more and finally held her face under water in the
bathtub “for five or six minutes” to be sure she was dead. (A medical
examiner would later conclude Linda Fida didn’t survive past the
choking.) He also tried to rape her but “nothing happened.” Years
later, Paul would tell a psychiatrist that he slipped on a woman’s wig
and blouse before sneaking into the Fidas’ apartment. “He said he
thought it was a disguise and if the act had more sexual meaning, he
did not know it,” the psychiatrist noted.
Paul also cleared up a smaller mystery that had
intrigued the police: the Band-Aids. He regularly banged up his toes
playing tennis, Paul said, and wore the Band-Aids to cover the ugly
damage.
As he confessed, Woodard, the prosecutor who lived
at the Robin Hood, listened raptly outside the door, aghast at what he
heard. “I had never encountered a person quite like this, not before
and not since, either,” Woodard says. “He was a complete sociopath. He
didn’t seem disturbed at all by what he had done.”
Paul’s wife Linda Shaffer was equally horrified.
When she asked him about the murder, he said only: “It was something I
had to do...I’ve always had a problem with women.” She helped with his
defense, selling his car to hire an attorney and continued to visit
him regularly in jail. She even agreed to stay married to him for a
while for the sake of appearances during his trial.
But every new revelation brought fresh revulsion. A
member of Paul’s defense team, she would say later, told her that he
would work to spare Paul the death penalty, but not to get him out of
jail, because he would almost certainly kill again. “You may be the
only woman in the world safe from him,” the man said. “He really loves
you.”
She wasn’t reassured. About a year after his
arrest, she visited Paul in the forensic ward of a state psychiatric
hospital in Pembroke Pines. She was seeing other men, she told him,
and was going to file for divorce. The news infuriated and depressed
Paul — “He just snapped,” Nilsen the minister told police later — and
Linda never saw him again.
But she heard from him, plenty. His long letters
continued to arrive for another 10 or 15 years. She never answered,
destroyed all her photos of Paul, and even most old pictures of
herself. When police asked her for a photo earlier this year, she
couldn’t find one before age 30. Over the years, her terror of her
ex-husband had grown so much that she wouldn’t give the cops a sworn
statement about him, even though he had been dead for a year.
And perhaps she was right. Nearly until the day he
died, Rowles wore homemade paper rings, one on each finger, bearing
her name, the date of their wedding, and — take your picking, chilling
or tender — terms of endearment like “the love of my life.” And among
his personal effects were letters indicating he had tried to tried to
hire private detectives to find her.
KATHRYN FORGUSON
As it turned out, no extraordinary legal efforts
were necessary to keep Paul out of the electric chair. A few months
after his arrest, the U.S. Supreme Court effectively abolished all
capital-punishment laws. It would take states several years to fashion
new ones. Paul pled guilty and was sentenced to life in prison.
Affable and well-behaved when not in the grip of
his lurid obsessions — “he was a nice person who, to make an analogy,
was possessed by demons,” says Frank, the homicide cop who got his
confession — Paul got along well in prison. After a few years, with
some junior-college business administration courses under his belt, he
was assigned to work in an accounting office. His supervisor was a
woman his same age named Kathryn Forguson. They fell in love.
Kathryn herself in 1984 would write to what was
then known as the Florida Parole and Probation Commission that “It
wasn’t long after I began working with Paul when we both realized a
relationship was developing between us going beyond that of
employer/employee.” They were in love, planned to marry and have a
family, she declared.
Florida abolished parole in 1995. But before that,
all convicted felons were eligible for early release from prison on
parole, no matter what their crime. And in the 1970s and early 1980s,
before the legal pendulum swung toward longer sentences with
compulsory minimums, they often got it.
“It was absolutely common for a person sentenced to
life on a homicide charge to be out in seven or 10 or 12 years,” says
Woodard, the former prosecutor. “That was a life sentence in those
days. I saw it many, many times.”
Many law-enforcement investigators who’ve had
access to a broader cross-section of Paul’s prison records believe
that Kathryn, who was divorced and had two daughters, carefully
coached him on fashioning himself into a good candidate for parole,
directing him toward prison rehabilitation programs that impressed
parole hearing officers.
His parole commission file is stuffed with letters
from her, promising to get him a job after release and festooned with
sociological buzz phrases (”self-initiated psychotherapy...self-punish
aspects of Paul’s personality...real inward changes which will ensure
lasting success in returning to the mainstream of society”) that were
popular with inmate-rehabilitation officials.
In one letter, she even suggested that Paul was as
much a victim as the woman he murdered: “Perhaps the commission could
have broadened their concept of ‘victim’ to include Paul. Paul’s crime
was an outgrowth of many years of suffering physical and emotional
abuse as a child.”
The strategy worked: Paul was released shortly
before Christmas, 1985. He married Kathryn and they moved with the two
daughters to the St. Petersburg area.
The idea that Paul was as innocent as the women he
killed outrages their relatives. They believe Kathryn was cynically
manipulated to engineer what amounts to a legal jailbreak. “I work in
corrections myself,” says Joseph Fida, whose company provides services
to inmates inside prison. “But that’s — I don’t know — a shocker, that
he got out after 13 years. I thought somebody with a life sentence
would do a hard 40, or at least 20 or 30 years. Thirteen just doesn’t
seem right.”
If Kathryn truly foresaw a happy, stable marriage,
she was disappointed. Life in their household was tense and fractured.
Her teenaged daughters detested Paul. One would tell police later that
he was “a monster” who beat her so badly she ran away. Paul himself
confessed to having sexual fantasies about one of the girls. The
atmosphere in the house was so grim that Paul would move out for
months at a time, though he and Kathryn lied about it to his parole
officer.
After both Kathryn and Paul lost their jobs, the
family moved to Gainesville. Paul worked as a delivery man, both for
Pizza Hut and a construction company putting up scaffolding. When he
was interviewing for the job at the construction company, the owner --
working from a standard set of questions -- asked if he was on
probation or parole.
“Yes,” Paul acknowledged promptly, then told an odd
lie: He had gone to prison for stabbing his father to death during a
beating. The owner, impressed with his candor, hired him anyway.
Employees at both companies noticed that Paul
seemed shy, even uncomfortable, in the presence of women. But if they
weren’t looking, he would give the pretty ones a hungry stare. One of
the construction workers later told cops that Paul liked his Pizza Hut
job better because of the opportunities to spot women. “I had a really
good night last night,” he reported after one shift of deliveries to
attractive women.
But Gainesville also had its down side: Paul
brushed shoulders with police. As a registered sex offender, he was
asked for blood and hair samples and fingerprints in connection with
the so-called Gainesville Ripper murders, the sexually depraved 1990
killings of five University of Florida students. (Another man
eventually confessed to the killings.)
And on April 16, 1991, he was stopped in the wee
hours of the morning prowling buildings near the Bivens Nature Park, a
small, shady woodland on the south side of Gainesville. As cops
approached him, he dropped a pair of gloves and a towel, then denied
they were his.
The police, who suspected he was a burglar, let
Paul go after they couldn’t find any evidence of a break-in. Not
knowing his background, they didn’t consider another possibility: that
he was planning to window-peep, or worse.
TIFFANY SESSIONS
Tiffany Sessions, 20, wearing the silver-and-gold
Rolex watch that she almost never took off, went out for her regular
walk on Feb. 9, 1989, and never came back. There were plenty of
suspects — a local motorcycle gang, a small-time drug dealer Tiffany
dated briefly, even a Texas trucker known as the Highway Killer who
kept a traveling torture chamber in the cab of his rig who might have
been passing through Gainesville at the time — but virtually no
evidence.
The most serious suspect, for years, was a murderer
and serial rapist named Michael Knickerbocker who committed some of
his crimes in Alachua County. Knickerbocker came under suspicion after
cops got a handwritten letter from an anonymous prison inmate saying
he’d overheard Knickerbocker bragging about murdering Tiffany and
selling her Rolex. “I hope you catch him so they can electrocute him,”
the letter said.
The letter turned out to have been written by
Knickerbocker himself. He was questioned many times over the next
decade. Sometimes he said the letter was just an empty boast. Other
times he was coy, dropping hints that it was true. He was an
intriguing enough suspect that both Pat and Hilary Sessions signed
letters giving their permission to Alachua County prosecutors to waive
the death penalty if he would confess and tell them where Tiffany was
buried.
“If you go back in old clippings, you’ll find a
bunch where I’m quoted as saying that I’ll be the most surprised guy
in the world if Knickerbocker doesn’t turn out to be involved,” says a
rueful Pat Sessions. “And here I sit, surprised.”
What neither Pat Sessions nor anyone else knew was
that Tiffany’s regular walking route took her by the construction site
where Paul Rowles worked.
BETH FOSTER
Elizabeth Foster — everybody called her Beth — was
a 21-year-old from New Jersey, studying sociology at Gainesville’s
Santa Fe College. On March 15, 1992, she told her roommate she was
going to Bivens Nature Park to read a book. She was never seen again.
Eleven days later, her battered body was found in a marshy wooded area
across the road from the park, the place where police questioned
Rowles a year earlier.
Three months later, Paul Rowles abruptly left
Kathryn and moved to Jacksonville.
THE TEENAGER
As 1993 drew to a close, Paul was back in touch
with Kathryn, first by telephone, then with personal visits. After a
long Christmas visit to the Clearwater apartment where Kathryn now
lived, the couple decided to reconcile, and Paul prepared to move his
belongings back from Jacksonville.
But then he saw the 15-year-old girl who lived in
the apartment upstairs from Kathryn’s, sunbathing in a bikini behind
the building. And his old fantasies of kidnapping and rape returned,
occasionally at first, then three or four times a day, he would tell a
psychiatrist. He began breaking into her apartment to steal the girl’s
underwear.
After his return to Jacksonville to pack, the
fantasies turned non-stop. He even drove his red Bronco over to
Clearwater some mornings to steal more underwear; he knew from careful
observation that everybody in the girl’s apartment had left for school
or work by 8:30 a.m. on weekdays.
On Feb. 2, 1994, Paul made another of his underwear
expeditions to Clearwater. But when he climbed through the apartment
window this time, he got a suprise: The girl wasn’t feeling well and
had stayed home from school.
Paul grabbed her by the throat, warned her to be
quiet if she wanted to live, and made her write a note to her mother
saying she had gone out with friends. Then he forced her to take off
her clothes and fondled and molested her, an action he would repeat
several times over the next few hours.
After taping her hands together and her eyes shut,
placing sunglasses over them and putting her in a fully reclined seat
in his Bronco, Paul drove the girl to Jacksonville. Along the way, he
stopped to pick up hamburgers at a Steak ‘n Shake restaurant on the
south side of Gainesville. They went to a wooded area about a mile
away, where Paul loosened the girl’s bonds so she could eat.
As they gazed out at the woods while munching their
burgers, Paul seemed contemplative. “This is a place where people go
to throw things away,” he reflected. the girl, who knew nothing of
Paul’s past, thought the remark peculiar, but ultimately meaningless.
When they reached Jacksonville, Paul raped the
girl. By now, certain their encounter would end with her death — she’d
seen his face and knew exactly who he was — the girl tried to buy time
by acting cooperative. Why not rest and watch TV for a while, she told
him, and they could have sex again later? Paul was agreeable.
He popped some TV dinners in the oven, and when he
went to check on them later, the girl unlocked the front door, shoved
aside a tire Paul had used to block it, and raced to a neighboring
apartment to seek help.
Paul was quickly arrested. When police questioned
Kathryn back in Clearwater, she was certain he was innocent and that
the girl had his identity confused with that of a man in a neighboring
apartment. Even so, her support for her husband seemed to waver for
the first time. She told the cops that “Paul was very smart and he
could plan any crime that he put his mind to,” according to a police
report.
And, she confided, their sex life had always been a
frustrating one. Paul hadn’t been able to have an orgasm while making
love with her in many years.
As he did in the Linda Fida murder case, Paul
quickly confessed to kidnapping and molesting the girl. He was
sentenced to 19 years in prison for armed kidnapping and sexual
battery of a minor. But that was just a technicality; because his
parole on the murder conviction was revoked, he would be in prison the
rest of his life. A court-appointed psychiatrist said Paul was
resigned to his fate. “He has not asked that he be set free,” the
psychiatrist wrote, “but that he would like to get some help for his
sexual fantasies which he feels he has no control over.”
The psychiatrist seemed to have little doubt that
was true. He noted that Paul had been given the Minnesota Multiphasic
Personality Inventory, a test designed to detect, among other things,
psychopaths. Paul “so grossly endorsed and exaggerated psychopathology
that his test was invalid,” the psychiatrist wrote. Whatever was wrong
with Paul was literally off the scales.
PAUL ROWLES
Both trails — that of the wounded and dead victims
left by Paul, and the one followed by the Tiffany Sessions
investigators — went cold in the mid-’90s. Paul led a quiet life in
prison; many inmates who served time with him don’t remember him at
all, even when shown a photograph.
The Sessions investigation kept attracting psychics
(some apparently well meaning, some out to score a quick buck), wily
con men, and the just-plain-crazy, but practically nothing resembling
actual leads. Tiffany’s parents quietly stopped referring to her in
the present tense. Even in their most fanciful moments, they no longer
believed she was coming back. “I thought all our efforts, the whole
thing, had been a big waste,” says Pat Sessions. “We had nothing to
show for it.”
The first big break in the case came in February
2012, from cold-case cops using new screening techniques to check DNA
found in a substance on Beth Foster against that of known sex
offenders who were living in Gainesville at the time of her murder.
The surprised police got a match on Paul Rowles.
A few years earlier, the DNA evidence — for which
there was no other plausible explanation than that he was the murderer
— probably would have made Paul confess, just as he had when
confronted with overwhelming evidence in the Linda Fida murder and the
kidnapping of teenaged the girl.
But by 2012, his lungs were being eaten away by
cancer and he was in serious pain from a leg broken in a prison
accident. He refused to discuss the Beth Foster case at all.
The Alachua County Sheriff’s Office, nonetheless,
considered the DNA definitive evidence of his guilt, and they turned
the case over to prosecutors to file murder charges. And now Paul was
on their radar for the Tiffany Sessions case, too. Two female deputies
went to the prison hospital at the Dade Correctional Institution,
where Paul was being held, to question him about Tiffany; but, in
obvious pain as well as his customary discomfiture with women, he sent
them away. Prison officials said the once-gregarious Paul had removed
all the names from his list of approved visitors; he didn’t want to
talk to anybody, about anything.
Six months later, the newly hired cold-case
detective Allen made questioning Paul his first priority. “But when I
got there, it was pretty obvious that we were too late,” Allen says.
Paul had been moved to a bed in the Kendall Regional Medical Center
where he lay in a coma, breathing only with the aid of a ventilator.
Allen, wary of an inmate scam, tried to question him anyway, then left
a picture of Tiffany Sessions by his bed where Paul would see it if he
woke up.
He didn’t. On Feb. 13, 2013, Paul Rowles died. But
he didn’t take all his secrets with him. He left behind two caches of
photos, paperwork and personal effects — one at the prison, another
with his old minister and only friend in the world, Joe Nilsen.
When Allen called to ask if he could see the box of
papers Nilsen had, the minister — now living in Tennessee — was
reluctant. “Paul is dead,” he said. “I don’t want his name besmirched
any further.”
“Just take a look at Tiffany Sessions.com, would
you?” Allen begged, referring to a website on the case maintained by
Tiffany’s parents. “And see if that doesn’t change your mind.”
Minutes later, a clearly spooked Nilsen called
back. “I’ll give you the box, I’ll give you anything you want, I’ll do
anything at all that you think will help,” he promised. The picture of
Tiffany Sessions, he explained, looked so much like Paul’s first wife
Linda Shaffer that they could have been sisters.
It took two months for Allen to round up all of
Paul’s papers. He skimmed through some of them, then opened up a small
red address book. First his eye was caught by entries for the murdered
Linda Fida and the kidnapped teenager. Then he saw a curious notation:
#2 2/9/89 #2.
“I literally staggered against another officer who
was standing beside me,” said Allen. “Literally. Because if there’s
one date that is engraved on my brain from the Tiffany Sessions
investigation, it’s Feb. 9, 1989, the day she disappeared. And she
would have been his second victim.”
DANGLING THREADS
From the moment Allen saw that coded little note,
so small and yet so full of meaning, neither he nor anyone else
involved in the investigation has doubted that Paul Rowles kidnapped
and murdered Tiffany Sessions. But the investigation has never
stopped, either.
Police dug up 10 acres of the woods where Beth
Foster was buried, going down four feet, without finding anything. The
site is about a mile from a Steak ‘n Shake restaurant, and the girl
Rowles abducted was brought in to see if she recognized as the place
where Paul told her that people used to get rid of things. She
couldn’t say for certain, but the woods creeped her out so badly that
she asked police to take her away.
Searching for Kathryn Forguson, Allen discovered
she has disappeared into the mists of dementia and is confined to a
nursing home. Where, exactly, remains a mystery; her daughters, now in
their 40s, angrily refuse to talk to police. “Paul Eugene Rowles is
DEAD! He was and is NO PART of our family! ...You are causing me
stress and anxiety and I WILL SUE YOUR ASS and HAVE YOUR BADGE if you
continue to harass us,” one daughter wrote in an email. She didn’t
respond to messages from the Miami Herald.
Allen had better luck with the son of one of the
daughters, a young drifter named Andrew. The result of a teenage
pregnancy, Andrew was raised by Kathryn Forguson as her own, and he
grew up thinking of Paul as a father figure. He provided Allen with a
knife once owned by Paul, told him of a box of Kathryn’s “personal
papers and memorabilia” that’s in the hands of one of her daughters,
and even pointed out one of Paul’s old houses where he lived apart
from the family. Police got the occupants’ permission for a search,
hoping to find an old bloodstain or concealed evidence in the attic,
to no avail.
Most significantly, he told police that Paul gave
his mother an expensive-looking gold watch for Christmas in 1993,
which she later pawned. Could it have been Tiffany Sessions’ missing
Rolex? Andrew took police to the pawn shop, which was able to dig up
old records confirming that Kathryn sometimes pawned jewelry there —
but nothing about a watch.
The watch is one of two dangling threads that might
provide the final confirmation of Paul’s guilt. Police have the serial
number, so they can positively identify it if it’s found. “Tiffany was
wearing that the day she went missing,” says her father Pat. “If we
can link that to somebody, it’s absolute proof they were involved.”
The other important lead is the red Bronco that
Paul owned at the time Tiffany disappeared. Police know it was used to
transport one of his victims, the teenager. Could Tiffany have been
inside it, too? Did she leave behind a trace of blood or something
else with her DNA? It was last sighted in 2003 in Oklahoma, where the
FBI is looking for it.
But as valuable a potential clue as the red Bronco
is, its discovery could confirm the thing that the Sessions family has
dreaded the most.
THE SECOND TEENAGER
Last year, long before police had publicly revealed
anything at all about Paul Rowles or his red Bronco, Pat Sessions got
an email from a woman. She started by asking forgiveness for what she
was about to tell him.
In 1989, when she was just 16, the woman was living
with her mother in Gainesville. Her parents had divorced, and her
father lived in a small town several miles north. Her father had just
gone home to recover from minor surgery, and early that evening she
decided to drive up to see him.
She had only been driving for a few months, and was
a little nervous about driving at dusk. So when she rounded a curve in
a rural wooded area about 10 miles north of Gainesville, she panicked
at the sight of a blonde girl running into the middle of the road,
waving her arms in obvious distress. She ran her car off the road into
a ditch.
As she tried frantically to back her car out of the
ditch, the young woman could see in her rearview mirror that the blond
girl looked terrified. And from the woods, a man was running toward
her. He seemed to be coming from a red truck that had been backed into
the treeline.
Terrified, she managed to get her car up onto the
road and roared away. By the time she got to her father’s house, she
was ashamed of leaving. Should she call the police? Her father
pooh-poohed the idea. Probably just a boyfriend-girlfriend dispute, he
said. Nothing to worry about. She decided to do as her father
suggested, and let it go.
The woman’s trip north took place on Feb. 10, 1989.
Over the next few days, she saw, over and over, reports about the
disappearance of Tiffany Sessions the night before. She wasn’t stupid;
the possibility that she had seen the kidnapped girl that everybody
was looking for was plain to her. But how would she ever explain why
she had just driven away and done nothing? The longer she waited, the
more impossible it seemed to report what she had seen.
Yet over the years, her decision gnawed at her. Now
in her mid-30s, with a daughter of her own, she understood more
clearly than ever what Tiffany’s parents were going through. And she
was reaching out. “I am beside you in your search for Tiffany,” she
said.
Pat Sessions gratefully put her in touch with
police. She easily directed them to the sharp and distinctive curve on
Racetrack Road where she went into the ditch. She passed a
lie-detector test and even agreed to be hypnotized in hopes that more
details would surface in her memory. But they didn’t.
“Did I believe her? Enough to take a team of
cadaver dogs out there to search those woods,” says Allen. “But the
dogs didn’t get any hits. So there’s not much more that we can do
right now. It’s a story we might be able to verify further if we find
the Bronco.”
But verification would also dash the belief with
which Pat and Hillary Sessions have comforted themselves the past two
decades or so — that whatever happened to their daughter, it happened
quickly. If Melissa’s story is true, it means that Tiffany was still
alive at least 24 hours after her abduction.
“We don’t want to think she suffered,” Pat says.
“And we don’t want to reexamine everything little thing we did or the
police did and ask, ‘Was this is a mistake? If we had done something
differently, could Tiffany have been saved?’”
Even from beyond the grave, Paul Rowles may still
be claiming new victims.