Casefile True Crime - Case 337: Test A.rtf (Part 2/4)
Episode Date: March 14, 2026[Part 2 of 4]*** Content warning: child victims ***After claiming seven victims and terrorising Wichita for nearly three decades, the unidentified killer known as B.T.K. suddenly fell silent. Then, in... 2004, a letter bearing his unmistakable signature arrived at a local newspaper…---Narration – Anonymous HostResearch & writing – Milly RasoProduction & music – Mike MigasAudio editing – Anthony TelferSign up for Casefile Premium:Apple PremiumSpotify PremiumPatreonFor all credits and sources, please visit https://casefilepodcast.com/case-337-test-a-rtf-part-2-4 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Our episodes deal with serious and often distressing incidents.
If you feel at any time you need support, please contact your local crisis centre.
For suggested phone numbers for confidential support and for a more detailed list of content warnings,
please see the show notes for this episode on your app or on our website.
Today's episode involves crimes against children and won't be suitable for all listeners.
What is this that I can see? Cold icy hands taking hold of me.
The death has come you all can see.
Hell has opened its gate to trick me.
Oh death, oh death, can't you spare me over for another year?
I'll stuff your jaws till you can't talk.
I'll bind your legs till you can't walk.
I'll tie your hands till you can't make a stand.
And finally I'll close your jaws till you can't talk.
your eyes so you can't see.
I'll bring sexual death and to you for me.
The poem arrived on Friday, February 10, 1978,
two months after the murder of Nancy Fox.
It was delivered in an envelope addressed to the studio office of local Kansas News
Television Station Cake TV.
Titled,
Oh, Death to Nancy, the poem was a twisted parody of the folk song Oh Death,
in which a man pleads with the grim Reaper to spare his life.
Listed four times along the left margin were the letters BTK,
each paired with a small hand-drawn hangman's noose.
He had also included a highly detailed sketch
of a partially naked woman bound face down on a bed,
depicting Nancy Fox's body with striking accuracy.
The scene was further brought to life
in an accompanying two-page typewritten letter marked
by BTK's characteristic poor spelling and grammar.
It described the layout of Nancy's apartment, the clothes she was wearing,
how her body was positioned and restrained, and the condition of her belongings,
including the theft of her driver's license.
These were details only Nancy's killer could have known.
The letter contained unreported details from Shirley Vianne's crime scene as well.
BTK claimed responsibility for Shirley's murder too, admitting he had planned to kill Shirley's three young children by suffocating the boys with plastic bags and hanging the girl.
He lamented that it would have been a, quote, beautiful sexual relief to do so, before describing an obscene detail the pleasure he took in killing 11-year-old Josie Otero the same way.
Ultimately, he said he gave a.
up the idea of killing Shirley's children only because the ringing telephones spooked him.
Fearing the unanswered call might prompt someone to visit the house and check in on the family,
he ended his plans prematurely to secure his escape. BTK expressed frustration that a poem he claimed
to have previously sent to the Witcher Eagle about Shirley Viann hadn't received media
attention. I find the newspaper not writing about the poem on Vianne unamusing, he wrote.
A little paragraph would have been enough. I know it's not the news media's fault.
He went on to blame police chief Richard Le Munion for the lack of coverage, even though neither
he nor anyone at the Eagle's office had any knowledge of the supposed poem.
The police chief, he keeps things quiet and doesn't let the public know there is a psycho running around loose, strangling mostly women, BTK complained.
Following this revelation, staff at the Wichita Eagle reviewed all their recently received mail.
In the classified advertising department's dead letter pile, they found a 3 by 5 inch index card which had arrived nine days earlier.
Stamped onto it with the children's rubber-letter kit was a short, poorly written poem.
It was an adaptation of the children's nursery rhyme Curly Locks about a girl who gets lost in the woods
and befriends three bears who live in a cabin.
The index card version referenced Shirley Vihan.
Shirley Locks, Shirley Locks, will to thou be mine?
Thou shall not scream, nor yet flee the line.
but lay on cushion and think of me and death and how it's going to be.
Signed BTK, it was followed by a post-script stating,
Poem for Fox Next.
Given that the card didn't list a specific department or recipient at the Eagle,
it had been inspected by a clerk in the mail room.
They assumed it was a cryptic Valentine's poem intended for the personal section
in the paper's upcoming February 14 edition.
The card was forwarded to classified advertising,
but as it lacked the required payment for publication,
it was ultimately discarded into the dead letter pile.
In the Cake TV letter, BTK attempted to offer an explanation for his crimes.
You don't understand, he wrote,
because you're not under the influence of Factor X.
He blamed his actions on this vague,
seemingly supernatural force, claiming it had also driven many other killers, including
Jack the Ripper, son of Sam, and the Boston Strangler.
BTK appeared to draw inspiration from these other notorious killers.
His crimes echoed aspects of theirs, and they too had taunted police through their writings.
In the words of one psychiatrist, each of them chose to share themselves with society in their
own ways to imprint themselves on history. BTK claimed the only cure for Factor X was death or being
caught and put away. He described living with it as a terrible nightmare, yet noted he didn't
lose any sleep over it. The letter ended with BTK proposing a list of names he wished to be
known by. His first suggestion was the BTK strangler, followed by alternatives such as Wichita
Strangler, Poetic Strangler and Bondage Strangler. He also offered darker monikers, including the
Wichita Hangman or Executioner, the Garrett Phantom, the Asphyxiaator, or simply just Psycho. But it was two
specific lines in his letter that drew the most alarm. One read, There are seven in the
around, who will be next? The other said, seven down and many more to go.
But the four members of the Otero family, in addition to Shirley Vian and Nancy Fox, accounted for just
six victims. When it came to his unnamed seventh victim, BTK wrote,
You guess motive and victim. Police Chief Richard Lemunion read BTK's latest letter slowly
and silently. It was clear the man behind the persona relished not only notoriety and fear,
but also took pleasure in taunting the police by turning his unidentified victim into a puzzle
he dared them to solve. The way he numbered his known victims suggested that this murder
had occurred after the Oteros but before Shirley Vianne. La Munion began reviewing homicides
from this three-year two-month period, which had previously been considered a hyaer.
for the killer. He found that just three months after the Otero murders, an incident occurred
that, in hindsight, bore several familiar hallmarks. After midday on Thursday, April 4, 1974,
21-year-old Catherine Bright arrived at her home on East 13th Street in northeast Wichita
with her 19-year-old brother, Kevin. Kevin had spent the previous night at Catherine's house to
avoid having to drive through recent snowfall. As they entered the dwelling, the siblings were
laughing about a joke, Catherine had told. They moved down a hallway and passed a bedroom, when a
voice startled them. Hold it right there. Waiting for them was a man the siblings had never seen
before. He was white, approximately 25 to 28 years old, just under six feet tall and looked to weigh
around 180 pounds. He had a few days worth of stubble with a thick mustache that reached the
corners of his mouth. A yellow and black stocking cap covered his head and a silver wrist watch
with an expansion band was visible on his left wrist. He brandished an automatic pistol with
gloved hands while a revolver sat holstered in a shoulder rig on his left side.
Catherine demanded to know who the man was and what he was doing in her home.
He claimed he was wanted in California and needed provisions, specifically a car, money and firearms, to make a clean getaway to New York.
The words the man used struck Kevin as odd.
He spoke as if he was reading from a turn-of-the-century detective novel, sounding far more polished and intelligent than his backstory implied.
People just don't say provisions when they mean food or firearms when they mean guns, Kevin thought.
Stranger still, the man thought he recognized Kevin.
Don't I know you? I think I've seen you up by the university, he asked, seemingly in reference to Wichita State University.
There was little conversation after that.
The man told Catherine and Kevin he was going to tie them up, but assured them they wouldn't be hurt.
He said he was only there to rob them and would leave once he had what he needed.
Because he hadn't brought anything to bind the siblings, the man rummaged through a dresser
and collected bandanas, belts, scarves, peonyhoes and t-shirts.
He then led them into another room and ordered Kevin to tie Catherine to a chair.
Afterwards, he forced Kevin into a front bedroom and ordered him to lie face down on the floor.
The man tied Kevin's hands behind his back, stuffed a washcloth into his mouth and then secured
it with a scarf before leaving the room.
Kevin heard the man rifling through the house, presumably searching for money.
At one point, he turned a radio up so loud that it drowned out almost all other noise.
Minutes later, the man returned to Kevin and asked if he thought he could untie himself.
Gagged, Kevin couldn't answer.
The man then looped a pair of pantyhose around Kevin's neck and pulled tight.
As Kevin felt his life slipping away, he thrashed desperately and managed to free his hands.
He stood and charged at the man who quickly raised his pistol and fired.
The bullet hit Kevin.
dropping him to the floor as blood pulled around his head.
The gunman then fled the room.
From across the house, Catherine screamed,
What have you done to my brother?
The man eventually returned to Kevin,
only to discover that he was still alive.
The bullet had only grazed his forehead.
A violent struggle ensued as the man attempted to strangle Kevin again.
Kevin clawed at the revolver in the man's shoulder holster and had almost wedged his finger against the trigger when the man drew his pistol and shot Kevin again.
Kevin went limp as blood gushed from another wound in his head.
By this point, the man had lost all control and composure.
Sweat tripped down his tired face.
Believing Kevin was finally dead, he left the room once more.
Against all odds, Kevin was still alive.
The second bullet had struck his upper jaw, knocking out two teeth.
He lay still, playing dead, until he heard his sister moaning in distress in the other room.
Kevin tried to formulate a plan.
Despite the reassurances the intruder had given them, it was clear he had intended to kill them both from the very beginning.
Kevin knew he was unlikely to survive another confrontation in his condition.
Summoning the little strength he had left, Kevin got up and snuck out the front door.
He ran out onto the street and flagged down a passing car.
Bleeding from the head with the pair of panty hose still around his neck, Kevin told the two men inside the car about the gunman.
He's in there now doing a number on my sister.
Please help me, he cried.
The driver rushed Kevin to the hospital while the passenger went to call 911.
Police radios crackled with reports of a residence robbery in progress as officers Dennis Landon and Raymond Fletcher raced to the scene.
Catherine's house was still and silent when Officer Fletcher approached the front door and knocked.
Meanwhile, Officer Landon went to the rear of the property and noticed,
the glass in a back door was broken, revealing the intruder's entry point.
As Landon moved into the house, he sighted a young woman lying face down in a pool of blood
outside a bedroom. It was Catherine Bright. She was cold and clammy, and her face was tinged
with a bluish shoe. Pandy hose was tied tightly around her ankles, and another pair secured her
wrists. A blue scarf and a length of white rope were looped loosely around her neck and tangled in
her hair. Officer Landon carefully rolled Catherine over. She was still alive and begged him to untie
her legs. Landon cut through the panty hose using a pocket knife and Officer Fletcher arrived as an
ambulance was summoned. With Catherine teetering on the edge of consciousness, the two officers
questioned her to gather as much information as possible. When asked what had happened,
Catherine lifted her blouse, revealing several open wounds in her abdomen. The officers
pressed kitchen rags to the injuries and elevated Catherine's legs. She managed to tell them
that she didn't know her attacker, who had since fled. At one point, Catherine grabbed
Fletcher's arm and repeated, I can't breathe. Help me.
He tried to keep her calm, but her pupils remained fixed and blank, and her breathing grew increasingly shallow.
Catherine had been stabbed five times in the front and twice in the back.
She muttered one more help me as she was taken into surgery, but died of her injuries while on the operating table.
Despite being shot twice in the head, her brother Kevin miraculously survived.
The crime scene suggested a violent robbery, yet something about it didn't quite add up.
The contents of Catherine's purse were scattered beneath a table in the entryway, and as several of her dresser drawers had been rifled through, yet nothing appeared to be missing.
Kevin's recollections allowed investigators to create a suspect sketch, but it didn't match any offenders wanted in California.
When no leads emerged, a $5,000 reward was offered and the case was added to the Secret
Witness program alongside the still-unsolved Otero murders.
Investigators did consider whether the two cases were linked as both involved fatal home
invasions, but the differences made any connections extremely tenuous.
The Otero killer brought his own restraints, whereas Catherine and Kevin were bound with items
from Catherine's home. Even the knots differed, with clove hitches used on the Oteros and granny
knots for the Brights. The killer broke into the Bright residence and lay in wait, whereas he
entered the Otero home when the family was present. Catherine's phone lines were intact,
and the Bright scene contained no sexual undertones, while none of the Oteros had been shot
or stabbed. Coincidentally, police officer Raymond Fletcher, one of the first responders at the
Bright scene, was also the first to arrive at Shirley Vianne's murder three years later.
While Fletcher immediately recognised Shirley as likely being a victim of BTK, he didn't draw
the same conclusion with Catherine. In the letter sent to Cague TV following the murder of Nancy
Fox, BTK taunted.
Did the cops think that all those deaths are not related?
Golly gee.
Yes, the MO is different in each, but look, a pattern is developing.
The victims are tied up, most have been women, phone cut, bring some bondage, sadist tendencies,
no struggle, outside the death spot, no witnesses, except Vianz kids.
Police Chief Richard Lemunion deduced
that Catherine Bright was likely BTK's unknown victim.
While the pattern was evident, it was incomplete.
It appeared that BTK had intended to carry out his signature killing,
but when Kevin Bright escaped, the plan was cut short,
much like what happened with Shirley Vianne.
He likely altered his methods in subsequent killings,
such as abandoning the use of a knife to avoid being linked back to the Bright case.
Le Mnion suspected B.TK had avoided naming Catherine in his letter not merely as a part of a depraved guessing game with authorities,
but because the crime had been sloppy and riddled with mistakes.
Most significantly, Kevin's survival presented a major threat.
He provided a reliable and credible account of his sister's murder,
including a detailed physical description of her killer and his possible connection to Wichita State Units.
University. How many do I have to kill before I get a name in the paper or some national
attention, BTK threatened in his Cake TV letter? Up until that point, Chief LeMunion had kept
news of the serial killer under wraps to maintain order. But now, with seven confirmed victims
and threats of more, LeMunion spoke with Cake TV's news director. He fully expected the chief to urge him to
bury the story entirely. But to his surprise, Le Mangan said,
For the good of everybody, it's time we tell what we know. We've got to warn people.
Case File will be back shortly. Thank you for supporting us by listening to this episode's
sponsors. Thank you for listening to this episode's ads. By supporting our sponsors,
you support CaseFile to continue to deliver quality content.
That evening, Chief La Munyon held a press conference in which he announced.
The purpose of this news conference is to advise the public of an extremely serious matter
involving a series of murders which have occurred in our city.
This person has consistently identified himself with the initials BTK
and wishes to be known as the BTK Strangler.
The decision for the police to officially go public with the news of BTK had its detractors.
Even LaMunian had doubts.
If BTK struck again, the chief worried he would be blamed for provoking him through the publicity.
Yet, he faced seven unsolved murders and the public remained oblivious to the danger.
Before the conference, LaMunion consulted several psychologists to determine whether publicly announcing the case might prompt BTC to communicate again and provide valuable intelligence.
Their guidance persuaded him to move forward.
Calmly and with resolve,
Le Munion informed the people of Wichita
that a serial killer was among them.
He also addressed the difficult question
of why news of BTK had been withheld for so long.
We felt the lack of news coverage would forestall any more killings.
That was what was hoped at the time, he admitted,
before adding that investigators were never fully certain all the murders were connected until recently.
There were, of course, very definite similarities,
but at the same time, there were very significant differences.
Le Munion explained that the police had every reason to believe BTK had the capability to kill again,
but they didn't know if, when or where he might strike next.
Worse still, they had no worthwhile leads or suspects.
He urged residents to remain vigilant.
After murdering Nancy Fox, B.T.K. wrote that he simply went home and carried on with his life,
quote, like anyone else.
He went on to warn,
And I will be like that until the urge hits me again.
Based on this information, Lamonion emphasized that B.T.
would not appear to be an obvious monster within their community, nor would he seem insane.
He would be hiding in plain sight, living a seemingly normal life outside of his crimes,
and appearing like any ordinary man in every respect. A psychologist agreed, explaining,
I don't think one could get very close to the guy, but he might not appear particularly different
superficially.
FBI criminal profilers suspected BTK was a lone wolf in his mid-30s, who performed well at work
but rarely stayed in one job as he disliked being told what to do.
He likely had military training and an interest in law enforcement, reading detective
magazines that gave insight into police procedures and ways to avoid detection.
He would criticise the BTK investigation in casual conversation.
and would be known to drive around frequently.
Profilers believed he likely lived within a few miles of the crime scenes
and might have known one or more of the Oteros personally.
In his private life, BTK likely consumed pornography
and engaged in sadomasochistic acts
involving both the infliction and reception of pain.
While he clearly derived sexual gratification from torture,
it was notable that he had a lot of.
committed rape. As a killer, he was controlling and sadistic. Megalomania was the term used to
describe him, someone gripped by delusions of grandeur and power. He dared people to catch him
almost as if he wanted to get caught, yet was exhilarated by the chase. One psychologist emphasized,
The unfortunate part of this is that he is stimulated by publicity.
Much to his embarrassment, police chief Richard LeMunion admitted that authorities didn't know how to stop BTK.
Research from the FBI indicated that serial killers were extraordinarily difficult to catch.
Most of the time it was a game of waiting and hoping, waiting for the killer to strike again and hoping they made a mistake.
I'll say this about BTK, Le Mungan said.
He's very good.
He doesn't leave much behind for us to work with.
To anticipate BTK's next possible target,
investigators attempted to create a victim profile.
All the murders had occurred within a three and a half mile radius in Wichita's East,
suggesting the killer was intimately familiar with the area
and likely considered it his home turf.
His victims were analysed for six.
similar characteristics, including details as specific as eye colour, but they varied widely.
However, several of his victims wore eye glasses. B.T.K. had even mentioned 11-year-old Josie Otero's
glasses in his first letter and included Nancy Fox's glasses in the sketch depicting her murder.
Thinking they might hold particular significance, this gave police an idea. Given the
that BTK had sent a letter to Cake TV, it was likely he watched their broadcasts.
Chief LeMunion arranged to discuss the case on their newscast, during which an image flashed on the
screen for a fraction of a second. It showed Nancy Fox's eyeglasses exactly as BTK had
sketched them, accompanied by the words, now call the chief. The subliminal message was intended
to entice BTK to respond.
While many viewers saw it and contacted police,
BTK did not.
It marked the first and last time Wichita Police used subliminal messaging to reach a killer.
Although BTK wasn't speaking to police,
there were countless reports of him contacting others.
Various households and women received calls from people announcing,
this is BTK, you're next.
Although they were deemed cranked,
the calls did little to ease the panic and distrust
the gripping Wichitae's looming presence.
Knowing he had the capacity to indiscriminately strike anyone anywhere
through carefully planned attacks or spontaneous violence,
everyone feared the killer equally.
Men, women, children and entire families were at risk.
Wichita's deputy police chief explained.
What makes this person so terrifying to people is that they fear they could be the next person chosen.
It's this fear of the unknown that makes the terror so personal and so powerful.
On the night of Saturday, April 28, 1979,
63-year-old widow Anna Williams arrived at her small two-bedroom home on South Pinecrest Street in Wichita's East.
She had been expected home hours earlier, but had deviated from her normal routine,
deciding to go square dancing and then visit her 24-year-old granddaughter Rebecca.
Rebecca had planned to accompany Anna to spend the night at her place,
but her boss had called her in for overtime on the evening shift.
By the time Anna arrived home alone, it was around 11pm.
In contrast to how she left it,
She noticed the door to her spare bedroom was ajar.
Inside, the drawers of a dresser had been opened and clothes were scattered across the floor.
Someone had stolen jewelry, clothing and a sock in which Anna had hidden $35.
Even more disturbing, belts, bindings and ropes had been laid out on the bed.
Anna rushed to call the police, only to find her phone line was dead.
terrified, she ran to a neighbor's house who called for help.
When officers arrived, they found no sign of the intruder,
but they noticed Anna's phone line had been cut and her basement window had been broken into.
The following month, Anna received a package in the mail.
It was addressed to her deceased husband, his name spelled out in big block letters.
Inside were various items, including a scarf and a piece of jewelry stolen from Anna's home during the April burglary.
There was also a drawing of a bound and gagged woman on a bed, naked except for a pair of pantyhose.
Her hands and feet were tied to a pole in a manner reminiscent of how safari hunters trust a big game
and designed so that any struggle to free herself would only tighten her restraints.
There was also a poem originally addressed to someone named Lois, but the name had been crossed out and replaced with Anna.
Riddled with typos, the poem was titled, Oh Anna, Why Didn't You Appear?
And referred to her within the text by the letter A.
T'was the perfect plan of deviant pleasure so bold on that spring night,
my inner feeling hot with propension of the new awakening season.
Warm, wet with inner fear and rapture, my pleasure of entanglement, like new vines so tight.
Oh, A, why didn't you appear?
Drop of fear fresh spring rain would roll down from your nakedness to scent the lofty fever that burns within.
In that small world of longing, fear, rapture and desperation, the games of,
we play, fall on devil's ears. Fantasy spring forth mounts to storm fury, then winter calm at the end.
Oh, A, why didn't you appear? Now in another time span I lay with sweet enrapture garments across most
private thought. Bed of spring moist grass, clean before the sun, enslaved with control,
warm wind scenting the air. Sunlight sparkled to.
tears in eyes so deep and clear.
Alone again I trod in past memory of mirrors, and ponder why you number eight was not.
Oh, A, why didn't you appear?
The poem was signed with a peculiar signature.
The letter B had been scrawled sideways to resemble a pair of eyeglasses, with a T next
to it joined to the following K, forming a smile dangling beneath the glass.
B.TK. It was the first time he had marked his correspondence in such a stylized way.
Curiously, a similar package had been sent to Cake TV. It contained copies of the O Anna poem
and the drawing of the restrained woman, as well as a few other items stolen from Anna's house.
It was now abundantly clear that it was BTK who had broken into Anna William.
's home intending to kill. He must have had knowledge of her schedule, but because she had made
spontaneous plans that night, she wasn't home when he expected. Eventually, he got tired of waiting
and left. Anna was a perplexing target. At 63, she was older than BTK's other victims who were all under 40.
Investigators wondered whether BTK had actually intended to target Anna's 24-year-old granddaughter Rebecca,
who would have been with her that night had she not worked late.
Whatever the case, the close call rattled Anna, and she fled Kansas as a result.
BTK had eluded police once again, but at least he hadn't claimed another life.
He seemed to go dormant after his failed attack on Anna Williams,
leading investigators to consider whether personal distractions in his daily life prevented him from
committing crimes more regularly.
1984 marked the 10th anniversary of the Otero family killings and the ongoing cat and mouse game
between BTK and the authorities.
But times had changed.
Advancements in technology and forensics in the new decade were proving invaluable to police work.
Computers saved thousands of man-hours that were previously spent searching and comparing documents
while enabling vast amounts of data to be stored efficiently.
For the first time, police also had the capability to perform DNA testing.
With these developments opening new investigative opportunities in cold cases,
police chief Richard Lemunion handpicked several detectives and computer consultants to form a secret
task force to re-examine the BTK case. A recently released film inspired their code name,
The Ghostbusters. The task force was housed in a dedicated office off limits to other police
personnel, where they spent their first month painstakingly reading over the thousands of pages
of reports in the BTK case file. Afterwood, they began reviewing the vast quantities of evidence
stored securely in underground vaults 50 miles northwest of Wichita.
Every detail of the crime scenes was scrutinized, while previously ruled out suspects were re-interviewed.
The audio recording of BTK's 911 call reporting Nancy Fox's murder was released publicly.
Investigators wondered whether the number three appearing in each victim's house number was more than a coincidence.
They studied books on numerology, mythology, witchcraft and demonology to explore its possible significance.
They even analysed the moon phases during each attack searching for a connection.
Advice was sought from interstate agencies that had recently faced their own serial killer investigations,
including the detectives who caught Son of Sam in New York,
and those still pursuing the Hillside Strangler in Los Angeles.
At one stage, confidential files, including crime scene photos, were shared with trusted members of the press.
They weren't meant for publication.
Investigators simply wanted to see if a fresh set of eyes noticed something they had overlooked.
BTK's written correspondence remained one of the case's few substantial clues, though he had been
careful not to lay fingerprints or DNA on any of them.
All of his letters except the very first one were determined to be photocopies of an original document.
Some were several generations removed from the original.
It appeared he had made the copies to obscure the text to prevent authorities from identifying the typewriter he had used,
while also preserving the original as a keepsake.
Photocopiers leave toolmark fingerprints along the edges of each sheet.
they process, which can potentially be traced back to the specific machine used.
BTK had the foresight to trim the margins of his messages.
Nevertheless, the Ghostbusters became experts in the hundreds of copies available in Wichita,
learning everything about them from their parts to their ink components.
They studied the types of trees used to produce different kinds of paper,
and learnt which companies manufactured various.
pulp varieties. They even analyzed the trace minerals present in different paper brands,
a byproduct of the fertilizers used on the trees from which the paper originated.
This line of investigation received a boost when staff from the US Printing Corporation Xerox
offered their expertise. As pioneers of the photocopier market, they offered to examine
BTK's letters in their lab and determined that the poem sent to Anna Williams in 1979
had likely been copied at the Wichita Public Library. It was in this same library that BtK had
hidden his first letter confessing to the Otero murders. The poem and letter sent to Cake TV
following Nancy Fox's murder were definitively traced to a copier located in the Life Sciences building
at Wichita State University.
The institution had come up in the case before,
when the killer had told Kevin Bright
that he might have seen him on campus.
The yellow and black stocking cap he wore
during the attack on the Bright siblings
also echoed the school's colours.
Furthermore, the text O Death,
which had inspired the Nancy Fox poem,
was found in a textbook used in an American folklore class there.
However, Wichita State shredded their student records after three years, leaving no official
enrollment information for 1978, the year the Nancy Fox letter had been copied on site.
The Ghostbusters began compiling extensive lists.
They started by cataloging every local white male fitting BTK's age profile, dead or alive.
They then tracked men who had lived within a quarter mile of the
Oteros, Catherine Bright, Shirley Vian, and Nancy Fox at the time of their murders.
Those connected to Wichita State University were included, along with known animal abusers,
window peepers, prison inmates, sex offenders, and men who owned the type of pistol used against
Kevin Bright. If a name appeared on two or more of the lists, it was considered significant.
But this barely narrowed things down, as
tens of thousands of men fell into this category. One individual appeared in four lists, while the
smallest list contained just eight names. These were men who had checked out the textbook applied
engineering mechanics from the public library around the time the Otero Confession letter had been
hidden within its pages. Each individual was systematically ruled out until the total number of names
was narrowed down to 30 men who were living in Wichita, and another 185 who were living elsewhere.
Two teams of detectives worked seven days a week, 12 to 14 hours a day, traveling to visit each of
these men in person. They collected blood and saliva samples, searched homes for clues,
such as detective magazines or bondage equipment, and interviewed current and former wives
and partners to determine if any of the men engaged in sadomasochism.
The biological samples were compared to the semen left by BTK at the Otero and Fox crime scenes,
but there were no matches. The task force didn't relent. They simply compiled new lists
and continued the search. At noon on Thursday, December 31, 1987, Wichita mother of two, Mary Fager,
turned to her family's one-story brick ranch home on East 14th Street after visiting
relatives out of town. The Fagas grey Volkswagen rabbit was missing from the driveway.
Mary assumed that her oldest daughter, 16-year-old Kelly, had taken her nine-year-old sister
Sherry out for a drive. It wasn't until Mary entered the house that she realized something
was horribly wrong. Her 37-year-old husband,
Philip lay dead on the living room floor, having been shot twice in the back at close range.
When first responders arrived, they discovered a horrific scene in the basement.
Beneath the fabric cover of a bubbling above-ground hot tub were the bodies of Kelly and Sherry Fager.
Nine-year-old Sherry was in her pajamas and had been bound with half-inch-wide black electricians tape
before being strangled to death and her body then dumped in the tub.
16-year-old Kelly was naked and had been asphyxiated, but was still alive when placed into the 92-degree hot tub eight hours after Sherry.
The lid was then sealed over Kelly, leaving her to drown.
Rumors swelled in the aftermath of the killings.
Police Chief Richard Lemunion was quick to assert doubt over any links between the Faguer murders and any other unsolved cases.
Instead, police focused on Bill Butter.
Worth, a contractor who had recently built the Fager's sunroom. He was tracked down to Florida
after stealing the Fager's car, withdrawing all the money from his bank account and buying new
clothes. On Tuesday, January 5, less than a week after the triple homicide, a letter arrived
at the Fager residence. Mary opened it to find a poorly written anonymous poem titled,
Oh God, he put Kelly and Sherry in the tub. It was accompanied by a drawing of a young girl
lying beside a hot tub with her hands bound behind her and fear etched across her face.
In the lower right corner was a familiar symbol, the letter B on its side, with a T and K below,
this time forming a frown. This marked BTK's first communication in eight years.
However, the letter contained no insider details of the fagre murders and the drawing was inaccurate,
suggesting it was inspired by news coverage rather than firsthand knowledge.
BTK did not confess or claim responsibility for the crime.
Instead, he expressed admiration for the family's alleged killer, Bill Butterworth.
This letter marked an unusual shift for BTK.
who was now composing taunting verses and illustrations for crimes he hadn't committed
purely to provoke fear, distress and uncertainty.
His self-insertion into the Faker case left his figurative DNA all over it
and was believed to have contributed to Bill Butterworth's acquittal.
By this point, thousands of man-hours and hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars
had been spent chasing an overwhelming number of tips, theories,
persons of interest, hoaxes, alleged confessions, and false correspondence in the BTK investigation.
Every lead had reached a dead end and the case remained stone cold.
Police Chief Richard LeMunion assured the public the case file wouldn't gather dust,
but behind the scenes, the Ghostbusters were being reassigned.
Only one detective remained actively working the case, though he was periodically pulled away for
other investigations until he was transferred to the homicide unit.
The three-year investigation had taken a heavy toll on the Ghostbusters team, who felt they
had exhausted every lead, yet unanswered questions plagued them daily.
Their relentless work brought fatigue, self-doubt and personal strain.
They endured sleepless nights, and some turned to alcohol to cope.
Their family suffered too, living in constant fear that BTK might harm them as payback.
This threat became very real for Chief LeMunion.
During BTK's reign, a parallel investigation in Wichita targeted a mysterious individual known only as the poet.
Some suspected that the poet and BTK were one and the same, given their shared interest in writing cryptic, sexually charged.
poems about murder. When the poet sent a letter threatening Le Munion's wife, the chief
personally entered the investigation to track down the elusive figure. This story is covered in
episode 308 of Case File titled Ruth Finley. Richard LeMunion had begun his tenure as police chief
determined to catch the Otero family's killer. Over the years, he oversaw investigations into three
more BTK victims. Yet, when he stepped down in 1988, the cases remained unsolved.
He called it the greatest disappointment of his 12 years as chief, a devastation that was shared by the
Ghostbusters. During an interview, one former member broke down in tears, feeling as if he had
failed young Josie Otero. Another told the Wichita Eagle, when I think of the Ghostbusters,
all I can think of is what a failure it was, and what I didn't do, and how I could have done more,
if only I'd been smarter. As time passed with no word from BTK, people wondered whether he had
moved away, been incarcerated, confined to a mental health facility, or had died. Perhaps he had
found a partner willing to indulge his violent sexual fantasies, satisfying urges that might otherwise
have driven him to attack others.
Whenever a Wichita homicide bore a hint of BTK's MO, questions arose about his involvement.
But since he never claimed responsibility, the answer was always the same.
Maybe, maybe not.
Some held out hope that BTK would eventually be discovered, perhaps over something as simple
as someone noticing him wearing Joe Otero's wristwatch.
An investigator who worked on the case in 1978 was far less optimistic.
He told the Wichita Eagle,
It's sad to say the only way that we'll ever find out who this individual is,
we'll have to be a victim.
Another investigator noted,
If the BTK Strangler died tomorrow of natural causes or some accident,
society might never know who he was.
But if he lived on, one question remained.
Would he kill again?
Or was he satisfied to fade away into obscurity?
Case File will be back shortly.
Thank you for supporting us by listening to this episode's sponsors.
Thank you for listening to this episode's ads.
By supporting our sponsors, you support CaseFile to continue to deliver quality content.
By the 2000s, life in Wichita had returned to normal.
Those who had lived through BTK's reign of terror had moved on with their lives,
and the younger generations didn't even know what the initials stood for.
As far as police knew, BTK hadn't claimed any victims since 1977,
and it had been over a decade since it sent any correspondence.
He barely made the news anymore, appearing only in brief.
mentions on the anniversaries of his murders.
One such article appeared in the January 2004 edition of the Wichita Eagle to mark the 30th
anniversary of the killer's first known crime, the 1974 Otero family quadruple homicide.
The piece suggested that many Wichitans probably have never heard of BTK, a claim
supported by local lawyer and criminal justice lecturer Robert Beattie.
When Beattie referenced the case during his class, the response surprised him.
I had zero recognition from the students.
Not one of them had heard of it, he recalled.
This prompted Beattie to write a book about the case, slated for release that coming April.
He predicted it would draw attention, remarking,
I'm sure we will be contacted by both crackpots and well-meaning people who have little
to contribute. But I do not think will be contacted by BTK. Two months later on Friday, March 19, 2004,
an envelope arrived at the Wichita Eagle addressed to the paper's newsroom. According to the return label,
it had been sent by a man named Bill Thomas Kilman, listing an address on South Old Manor Road in
Wichita. The newspaper received about 700 pieces of mail daily, but this one stood out.
Inside was a single sheet of paper that contained grainy photocopies of several images,
including three Polaroid photographs depicting a woman bound on the floor.
At the top of the page was a cryptic string of stenciled letters. GBS OAP 7 dash TN and
L-T-R-D-E, ITBS, F-A-V-14.
At first, it was assumed to be just a senseless, incoherent letter from a mentally unwell
individual, and it was almost discarded.
But what drew attention was a faint, graffiti-like symbol in the lower right corner of the
page.
It consisted of a letter B, tipped over to resemble a pair of breasts, each curve marked with a dot
for a nipple.
Underneath it were the letters T and K fused together to suggest arms bound behind the breasts
and legs splayed wide.
Adding to the unease was the sender's name.
Bill Thomas Kilman bore the initials BTK and the surname Kilman didn't seem coincidental.
The letter had been postmarked two days earlier on March 17.
which happened to be the 27th anniversary of Shirley Vayan's murder.
Newspaper staff found no record of a man named Bill Thomas Kilman in Wichita,
and the address he listed on South Old Manor Road led to a vacant apartment building.
It was assumed to be part of the joke.
Old Manor sounded a lot like Old Man, a nod to the stage of life BTK would presumably now be in.
The Polaroid photos of the bound woman looked disturbingly like crime scene photographs,
but it was quickly pointed out that the woman's arms were in different positions across the photos.
In some, she was fully clothed, while in others her top and bra were pushed up to partially expose her breasts.
Police never moved a body around like that when documenting a crime scene,
meaning they couldn't possibly be genuine.
Everything suggested the letter was just an elaborate, distasteful hoax, hardly the first in BTK's long history.
Yet, something else stood out.
Among the images of the bound woman was a photocopy of a Kansas driver's license.
The accompanying photo showed a woman looking pleasantly at the camera, her thick, shoulder-length blonde hair and fringe framing her face.
Her date of birth was listed as March 25, 1958, and her address was on West 13th Street North in Wichita.
Her name was Vicky Weggarly.
The Eagle staff felt a chill run down their spines.
Over 17 years earlier, late on the morning of Tuesday, September 16, 1986, a 911 call was placed from Wichita.
I think someone has killed my wife the distressed.
male caller reported, wailing repeatedly. Vicky, Vicky, Vicky, oh God. No, no, no. Two firefighters
arrived first on scene, a multi-story family home on West 13th Street North. On the front porch,
they found the man who had called 911, Bill Waggerly. He was punching a wall in anguish,
saying, if I could have been here five minutes earlier, I could have done something.
Inside the main bedroom, the firefighters found Bill's wife,
28-year-old Vicki Weggarly.
Her body was wedged in a three-foot space between the bed and a television cabinet.
Her jeans were unzipped and her breasts were partially exposed, with her wrists tied behind her back.
Her ankles were bound with leather shoelaces,
and a deep ligature mark encircled her neck.
Vicky had fought fiercely, clawing some of her killer's skin under a fingernail,
but she was ultimately overpowered and strangled with a pair of pantyhose taken from her own dresser drawer.
Bill Waggerly, who was a house painter by trade, told the police that he had gone home for lunch that day
as he was working on a site nearby.
Vicky was there with their youngest child, two-year-old Brandon,
while their eldest daughter was at school.
As Bill drove home, a gold 1978 Chevrolet Monte Carlo luxury coupe passed in the opposite direction.
For a moment, Bill thought it was Vicky's car as she drove the exact same vehicle.
But when he saw a tall man alone at the wheel, he realised he was mistaken.
Upon arriving home, Bill noticed Vicky's car was gone, and he saw a car.
he found Brandon alone inside. Though it wasn't like Vicky to leave Brandon behind, Bill assumed
she had just stepped out briefly and he waited for her to return. When 45 minutes passed with
no sign of her, he searched the house, discovered her bound body in the bedroom and promptly called
911. Police zeroed in on who they thought was the most logical suspect in cases like these. The husband,
They thought that Bill Waggerly appeared suspicious.
He showed a little visible emotion, coming across as cold-hearted,
and the fact that he'd been at home for 45 minutes before discovering Vicky's body
seemed like a convenient cover.
Vicky's car was ultimately found within walking distance of the Weggerley home,
parked in a lot next to a meat market.
Nothing was found in or around the vehicle to indicate that a stranger had driven it.
If the car had been stolen and Bill saw it being driven away on his journey home,
investigators wondered how it had ended up so close by.
Bill took two polygraph tests and failed both of them.
Realising he was being viewed as the prime suspect, Bill refused to cooperate further with police.
Though there was insufficient evidence to charge him with Vicky's murder,
many detectives remained convinced that he was responsible.
Rumors that Bill had killed his wife followed him for years to come,
and his children were teased for it.
Throughout it all, Bill Waggerly maintained his innocence,
consistently asserting that he had loved Vicky and would never have harmed her.
Those who knew the family agreed.
In their view, the Weggallies had a happy marriage.
Their home was always always.
filled with warmth, laughter, and the occasional sound of Vicky's beautiful piano playing.
Bill had always been a reserved man who didn't show much emotion, but he regularly visited his family
during his workday because he enjoyed doing so. Given that Vicky's body wasn't visible from the
bedroom doorway, it made sense that he might not have noticed it immediately. At the time of Vicky's
murder, the task force re-investigating BTK was winding down, though,
a few detectives had visited the Weggaly crime scene to rule out any connections.
There were several details that struck them as significant.
Two-year-old Brandon had told the police,
Man hurt Mummy.
The Ghostbusters reasoned that a child wouldn't use the word man if he meant daddy.
What stood out most, however, was that Vicky's driver's license
appeared to be the only item missing from her home.
Her wallet, money and credit cards had been left behind.
A driver's license held little value to an ordinary burglar,
unless it was taken as a trophy.
While the victim profile, bindings, method of killing and missing driver's license were notable,
there was nothing to definitively prove BTK was responsible for the crime.
The Ghostbusters came away believing Bill Weggely was likely innocent.
but they refrained from imposing their judgment on the detectives actively investigating Vicky's case.
As far as they were concerned, their sole focus was BTK.
By the following year, the Ghostbusters had effectively disbanded, and the Weggarly case remained unsolved.
Almost two decades later, the Wichita Eagle received a letter from someone claiming to be BTK,
taking responsibility for Vicky Weggleys' murder.
He hadn't claimed a victim since Nancy Fox,
nearly nine years before Vicky was killed.
While the newspaper assumed it was likely a hoax confession,
they reported it to the police regardless.
They confirmed that the woman in the Polaroid photographs
was indeed Vicky Weggarly.
The problem was,
no crime scene photos had been taken of her body in
situ, as first responders had moved her from the bedroom to a larger room to attempt CPR before
police arrived. In fact, no official photographs were taken of Vicky inside her home as she was
rushed to the hospital before any could be captured. This meant the Polaroids could only have
come from one person, her killer. Vicky's killer had also provided authorities with his DNA in the form of
skin scrapings collected from beneath her fingernails.
With forensic tests available in 2004, investigators were finally able to conclusively clear
Bill Weggerley after nearly 18 years as the crime's prime suspect.
The exoneration came as a relief for Bill, who told the police,
I'm glad you cleared me. All I ever wanted was for you to find who killed Vicky.
The DNA from the scrapings were compared to the same.
seamen left at BTK's crime scenes. Upon receiving the results, one detective remarked,
Fuck, it's him. Oh shit, shit, shit. After all the years of speculation about what had become of
BTK, it turned out he had never left Wichita at all. He had victims the police didn't even know
about and he wasn't prepared to let them go unaccounted for.
BTK's DNA was entered into a newly developed national database of criminals, but there was no match.
Vicky Weggarly was now the eighth known victim of BTK.
While the realization that she had been killed by the notorious serial killer was deeply distressing for her family,
they remained hopeful that the person responsible might finally be caught and the case be solved.
It was a hope shared by the loved ones of BTK's other victims.
Though it was troubling to know he was still at large, his recent contact brought investigators
a mix of exhilaration and relief, as it meant they still had a chance to catch him.
But it wouldn't be easy.
BTK was careful not to leave any forensic traces on the latest documents he sent to the Wichita Eagle,
and the meaning behind the string of 23 stenciled letters at the top of the page remained a mystery.
With BTK's return, the Ghostbusters Task Force was reactivated,
bringing together several original members along with new detectives.
What led BTK to come forward after all those years could only be speculated?
Did the article about the anniversary of the Otero family murder two months earlier
prompt him to step back into the spotlight out of fear of irrelevance?
Or maybe he wanted to reveal all his crimes so that nothing would be.
be missed in the book being written about him. Perhaps he wanted to control his legacy instead of
leaving it to a random author. To FBI criminal profilers, BTK simply couldn't resist coming forward.
He was essentially saying, look at what I've done. The profilers believed that knowing the truth
about Vicky Wiggly's murder all these years was a heady, intoxicating experience that left BTK feeling
as though he was playing God.
Seeing BTK appear in the headlines again
stirred up long-dormant fears in Wichita.
Familiar warnings were issued for residents.
If you're being followed, don't go home.
If you return home and notice anything unusual
like lights on or doors open, don't go inside.
Check your telephone.
If it isn't working, get out.
Keep windows and doors closed and locked.
Don't let anyone in without verifying their identity first.
As the BTK case became a top priority for police once again,
they were left wondering, where had he been all these years?
The prevailing theory by 2004 was that he had died,
but this clearly wasn't the case.
Whatever the explanation, BTK had gotten Wichitaar's full attention once again,
just as he intended.
A retired forensic psychologist told the Wichita Eagle.
Everything he does has a purpose and elaborate forethought.
I think he'll savour the next few days.
He's got the pot stirred.
With the rise of the internet, the case became an obsession for online sleuths.
Some theorised that BTK and the Zodiac killer were the same person.
Others suspected that BTK
could be responsible for other infamous unsolved cases,
including the strangling of six-year-old John Bonnet Ramsey in Colorado.
The finger was pointed at everyone from Wichita State University professors
to homicide detectives and journalists who covered the case.
Even Robert Beatty, the lawyer writing the book about BTK, was accused.
On Tuesday, May 4, 2004,
46 days after the Wichita Eagle received the letter linking BTCHA,
BTK to the murder of Vicky Weggarly, an envelope arrived at Cake TV.
This one was sent from Thomas B. Kingman, whose initials formed an anagram of BTK.
It contained several items. One was a complex full-page word puzzle titled Chapter 8.
Similar to a word search, it was divided into three sections, MO, ID, and Ruse.
Each section contained words related to its heading.
The words cruise, follow, prowl and the phrase go for it were found in the MO section.
Ruse included handyman, serviceman, insurance, realtor and wrong address.
The ID section contained Strong, Anderson, telephone company, officer and school.
This information related to another document,
that contained photocopies of handmade and falsified ID cards with their photos blacked out,
as well as a fake police badge.
One of the ID cards bore the name Francis Strong and claimed he was a supervising service foreman
for a telecommunications company.
The other was a school security ID featuring the name Larry Anderson.
These items confirmed a long-standing police theory that BTK,
sometimes gained access to victims' homes by pretending to be on official business.
This aligned with the story given by Shirley Vianne's young children
that their mother's killer had posed as a detective.
The cake TV envelope also contained a piece of paper with chapter headings
for what was described as the BTK story.
They were presented like a table of contents as follows.
1. A serial killer is born.
2. Dawn. 3. Fetish.
4. Fantasy World.
5. The search begins.
6. BTK's haunts.
7. PJs.
8. M.O. ID. Ruse.
9. Hits.
10. Treasureed memories.
11.
Final Curtain Core.
12.
Dusk.
The title of the final chapter number 13 asked,
Will there be more?
To be continued next week.
