Blood Secrets: Chronicles of a Crime Scene Reconstructionist (21 page)

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Authors: Ann Rule

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Murder, #Medical, #True Crime, #Social Science, #Law, #Criminal Investigation, #Criminology, #Blood, #Hematology, #Evidence, #Bloodstains, #Evidence; Criminal, #Forensic Medicine, #Forensic Hematology, #Forensic Science, #Evidence; Expert

BOOK: Blood Secrets: Chronicles of a Crime Scene Reconstructionist
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No matter what, my procedure remains the same: I examine the evidence methodically, conduct experiments when they are needed, report my findings, testify about them if I’m asked to, and then leave. I never stick around the courtroom to hear the verdict read out. That would show an undue interest in the outcome of the case, and my job is to be impartial. I have to focus on the evidence, not the characters, even when the rest of the country is obsessed with them.

Case Study: Bob Crane and the Mystery Marks

One of the early celebrity cases I consulted on was the murder of former
Hogan’s Heroes
star Bob Crane. In the summer of 1978, Crane was in Scottsdale, Arizona, starring in a play called
Beginner’s Luck
at the Windmill Dinner Theatre. When he failed to turn up for a publicity event on June 29, his costar Victoria Berry decided to drop by the Winfield
Apartments, where Crane had taken up temporary residence, to make sure he was okay. Finding the door unlocked, she walked in and saw her costar lying facedown in bed, clad only in boxer shorts and partially covered by blankets. His head was covered in blood.

Berry called the police, who rushed to the scene and determined that Crane was dead, his skull crushed by two blows from a blunt instrument. The forty-nine-year-old actor had been hit so hard that his bloodied face was almost unrecognizable, and whoever killed him made doubly sure he succeeded by winding an electrical cord tightly around Crane’s neck to strangle him after bludgeoning him.

Police first surmised that the weapon might be a tire iron or jack handle, since a transfer blood pattern of two long parallel lines about two inches apart on a corner of the sheet suggested a long, straight blood-covered object had rested against it.

They also suspected the killer was someone Crane knew because there was no sign of forced entry and neighbors reported having heard no arguments or loud noises. The motive? Police weren’t sure, but Crane was famous in certain circles as a womanizer with a penchant for videotaping his conquests, so it seemed plausible that the murder might be linked to his sexual escapades. A camera was perched on a tripod near the murder bed and another lay on the floor, testament to the dead man’s favorite guilty pleasure. Investigators also found a veritable library of Crane’s pornographic exploits. Perhaps the jealous husband or lover of one of the many women he had captured on tape had killed him or hired someone else to do it.

Detectives soon zeroed in on Crane’s friend John Carpenter, a video salesman who often barhopped with the actor and costarred with various women in several of his X-rated home movies. Carpenter claimed to have left Crane outside a coffee shop at two
A.M.
the night of the murder, which made him one of the last people to see the victim alive. He also made several suspicious moves like leaving town for L.A. the
morning Crane’s body was discovered and allegedly showing little surprise when he phoned Crane’s room and heard a police officer answer. Most significant, when investigators searched the rental car he had been driving at the time of Crane’s murder, they found a smear of type B blood—a match with Crane’s—on the passenger’s-side door. Only 10 percent of the population has type B blood.

Several sources close to Crane told police the actor had been complaining about his perpetual sidekick and wanted to ditch him. Witnesses even reported having seen the two arguing at a nightclub a few nights earlier. Had the prospect of losing his star connection and the endless access to willing women that went with it driven Carpenter into a murderous rage? Prosecutors thought so, but Carpenter denied any involvement in or knowledge of the killing, and ultimately there was simply no evidence to link him to it. No one was arrested or charged, and the case remained unsolved.

It was hardly forgotten, though. According to the trial coverage, prosecutors raked police over the coals for what they deemed sloppy evidence handling and failure to secure a crime scene that might have yielded crucial clues in the highest-profile homicide the city could remember. Local papers quipped that if you were looking for a scenic spot to bump someone off and get away with it, Scottsdale was your best bet.

When Richard Romley took over as county attorney in January 1989, he appointed a special review board of fifteen deputies to reexamine evidence from cold cases. Crane’s was at the top of the list. He had the blood sample from Carpenter’s rental car retested the following year, hoping advances in DNA technology might link it to the Crane murder, but results proved inconclusive.

Around the same time, I was lecturing in the area and got a call from the Maricopa County District Attorney’s Office asking me to analyze the blood patterns in the crime scene photos and give an interpretation
of what it all meant. I agreed, and the two lead attorneys met me in Phoenix, then later came to Portland to examine the evidence with me. (I later worked with the same office on another high-profile murder involving the execution of nine people, including six Buddhist monks at a nearby temple.)

It was obvious Crane had been killed with a blunt instrument, judging from the medium-velocity blood spatter evident in the photographs of his body, the bedding, and the bed itself. Linear lacerations were evident in the close-ups, though there was no distinctive pattern in the wounds to help us identify the weapon. Blood smeared all over the electrical cord indicated that the strangulation had followed the bludgeoning, and bloody hand transfers on the curtains suggested a killer with a bloody hand had pulled them aside to peer out before leaving. But it took us several weeks to put two and two together and ask the obvious, overlooked question: What’s missing in this picture? The answer: The tripod for the second camera.

Those who knew Crane intimately knew he filmed using cameras on tripods. The missing one could easily have created the head wounds the actor sustained as well as the linear blood transfers on the sheets that were mistaken for marks left by a tire iron or jack handle. It would have been the logical murder weapon, though it was never found.

Not as easy to explain were several other linear blood patterns, some short and some long, as well as a pair of very short, straight lines in blood on Crane’s shoulder. Prosecutors wanted to know if I could determine what had caused the marks and whether they might reveal anything about the killer’s identity.

The answer came from an unlikely source.

As part of my community-policing efforts, I was working with Portland’s David Douglas High School to co-teach and shape the curriculum for a newly created law-related class. David Douglas drew from some of the city’s roughest areas and college enrollment rates
among its grads were minuscule compared with those of other area high schools, where the student population was more affluent. Our goal was to expose underprivileged students to professions they might not have considered and to broaden their career horizons. We invited judges, crime writers, court reporters, and cops to work with the teenagers and to tell them about their jobs. The class also had parental permission to help me with blood spatter experiments for cases I was handling.

During the Crane investigation, we set up a camp bed with white sheets and purchased a variety of tripods, then had the students conduct blind experiments with the camera stands closed as well as opened to discover what types of imprints each one made on the sheets when dipped in stage blood. (Keeping the experiments blind meant the students were not allowed to see photos from the Crane murder, which might have influenced their efforts and led them to try deliberately to re-create the mystery marks.)

As luck would have it, two of the prosecutors from the Crane case had flown up from Maricopa County, Arizona, to observe some of the experiments my class was conducting and happened to be on hand when something extraordinary occurred. Among my students was a sixteen-year-old girl named Kim Douglas,
*
whose ambition was to become manager of the Taco Bell where she worked after school. Toward the end of class, she hurried up to us, an excited expression on her face.

“I think I figured it out!” she said. “Look!” And she slapped the plug of an electrical cord dipped in stage blood against her arm. Sure enough, the prongs made a pair of marks just like the ones on Crane’s shoulder and the cord left a longer linear pattern near it. She repeated the test on several other students’ arms and on the sheets we had brought in for the experiments.

Her solution to the puzzling blood pattern was as brilliant as it
was simple. The killer inadvertently slapped the bloodied plug against Crane’s skin as he strangled the man. Why didn’t we see it before? I asked myself. How had all of us “experts” missed something so obvious? I had been staying up half the night conducting experiments in my lab in an attempt to replicate the bizarre blood prints with no success.

Kim Douglas’s discovery is one of the many reasons I encourage input from everyone involved in my cases. I take every source’s ideas seriously and try to give them equal weight. You would be surprised at how often it is not a scientist or a seasoned cop but a senior on internship or an office assistant who provides the fresh, out-of-the-box thinking that cracks the case.

The DAs were duly impressed and asked all the students to put their initials on the sheets with the tripod and the electrical plug marks, just as professional evidence collectors would do. Then they photographed the work and took the sheets back with them to Arizona to submit into evidence.

Though the students at David Douglas had no idea whose case they were working on, they knew they had solved a real mystery in a real murder. The triumph on their faces was exhilarating to see. That breakthrough was one of many reasons that a remarkable majority of the students in the class went on to attend college. Kim Douglas gave up on the fast-food industry and set her sights on law school instead.

The plug pattern and the tripod prints put two mysteries to rest, but they hardly revealed the killer’s identity. Again, the Crane case stalled. Then, in 1992, a shred of evidence came to light that gave Romley new hope. In examining an old police photograph of the door of Carpenter’s rental car, his deputies spied a dark, irregularly shaped blotch, about one-sixteenth of an inch in size. The spot looked just like the spots of brain tissue on the bloody sheets under Crane’s body. It was enough to reopen the case.

Evidence collection procedures were very different in the 1970s, however, and nobody had paid any attention to the speck back then. The tissue sample had not been preserved, so there was no way to test it and confirm or deny the theory that it was brain matter.

Undaunted, Romley brought charges of first-degree murder against Carpenter, and he was arrested in Los Angeles on June 1, 1992, fourteen years after Crane’s death. At that time he was also facing charges of child molestation, which delayed his extradition to Arizona. He pleaded no contest and got three months’ probation. The Crane case went to trial in 1994.

I was called to testify about my theory on the murder weapon and to explain the positions the victim and the murderer would have been in when the attack occurred. The evidence suggested that Crane was asleep under the covers when his assailant snuck up on him, bludgeoned him, and then strangled him.

Not surprisingly, the case hinged on the photograph of the mysterious speck in the rental car. Was it tissue? If so, was it Crane’s? Was it proof that Carpenter played a role in the murder? After two days of deliberations, the jury said no. Carpenter was acquitted owing to lack of evidence. He died in 1998, still maintaining his innocence in the murder of Bob Crane.

Case Study: Robert Blake and the
In Cold Blood
Question

A few years later, I was asked to consult on another murder involving a once well-known television name that, like Crane’s, had faded from the limelight. This time, though, the celebrity was not the victim, but the accused.

On the evening of May 4, 2001, Robert Blake and Bonny Lee Bakley, Blake’s wife of about seven months, went to dinner at Blake’s longtime favorite restaurant—Vitello’s, in Studio City, California. The onetime
Baretta
star had been a regular for so many years that the popular Italian eatery had named a pasta dish in his honor. Normally he used Vitello’s valet parking service, but almost nothing about the night in question could be described as normal for the sixty-seven-year-old actor. Breaking his routine, he parked his black Dodge Stealth down the street behind a construction Dumpster under a burned-out streetlight and walked a block and a half to Vitello’s with Bakley, past plenty of empty curbside parking spaces closer to the restaurant.

Around nine-thirty
P.M.
, the couple left Vitello’s and walked back to the Stealth. According to Blake’s version of events, he suddenly realized he had left the handgun he carried for his wife’s protection in the restaurant booth. After assuring Bakley he would be back shortly, he hurried off to retrieve it. When he returned, he found Bakley slumped in the passenger seat, bleeding copiously from two gunshot wounds—one to her right cheek and one to her right shoulder. Blake raced to the nearest house and banged frantically on the door. This being Studio City, the home belonged to someone in show business—filmmaker Sean Stanek. When Stanek answered, a shaking Blake dragged him to the car, where Bakley was barely breathing. While Stanek called 911 on his cell phone and tried to administer first aid, Blake ran back to Vitello’s for more help. Bakley died before he returned. She was forty-four years old.

Anyone can panic during an emergency, but a number of Blake’s actions raised suspicions among the investigating detectives. The actor told them he had recently started carrying a gun because he feared someone was stalking his wife. If so, why park in a secluded area near a construction site? Why leave her alone in the car with the windows down? The temperature was a chilly fifty-seven degrees, and Bakley was wearing only a lightweight nylon outfit, but Blake took his keys with him so
she had no way to close the windows or turn on the car’s heater. Blake said he chose the inconspicuous spot assuming that keeping Bakley out of sight would protect her but he wasn’t thinking straight when he left her in the car.

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