Partly Cloudy
56°
Morris, IL
Partly Cloudy|Forecast »

Serial-murder suspect, a suicide in Alaska, called ‘a force of pure evil acting at random’

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
Anchorage Police Chief Mark Mew, center, speaks with reporters Sunday, December 2, 2012, about the apparent suicide death of Israel Keyes in Anchorage, Alaska. Chief Mew was accompanied by Mary Rook, the FBI special agent in charge of the Anchorage Division, left, and U.S. Attorney Karen Loeffler. (Photo by Bill Roth/Anchorage Daily News/MCT)

(MCT) — ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Israel Keyes was a serial killer who traveled from Alaska to Vermont for the “specific purpose of kidnapping and murdering,” and who chose his victims there for no reason other than the layout of their home, Vermont authorities said Monday.

Speaking to Vermont media, federal and local authorities gave the first detailed account of the killings of Bill and Lorraine Currier, who disappeared from their Essex, Vt., home in June 2011.

Keyes’ victims encountered “a force of pure evil acting at random,” said Tristram Coffin, the U.S. attorney for Vermont.

Prosecutors said Keyes confessed in jail to first shooting Bill Currier to death as he yelled for his wife, and then sexually assaulting and strangling Lorraine Currier in the basement of an abandoned farmhouse.

The 34-year-old contractor and handyman, accused in the kidnapping and murder of 18-year-old Samantha Koenig, committed suicide in his jail cell at the Anchorage Correctional Complex on Sunday, authorities said.

Authorities believe Keyes killed eight people: Samantha Koenig, the Curriers, one person in New York and four in Washington state. Koenig, a barista, was abducted from an Anchorage coffee bar on Feb. 1.

The state Department of Corrections would not say whether Keyes left a suicide note, whether he was on suicide watch or even when he was last checked.

Kevin Feldis, the chief criminal prosecutor with the U.S. attorney’s office in Anchorage, also declined to address whether there was a suicide note but said that everything in Keyes’ jail cell is being examined.

Feldis said that of the four people Keyes told them he killed in Washington state, two were a couple.

He said it wasn’t clear if the other two were connected to each other in any way.

Keyes provided broad time frames for the Washington state deaths and gave a more specific time frame for the person he said he killed in New York state, Feldis said.

On Monday, Coffin said the murder in New York happened in 2009.

Investigators were still trying to get him to reveal more when he apparently killed himself.

Monday was the first time authorities have revealed the details of any of the crimes or how victims were killed. Coffin said that Keyes confessed to murdering the Vermont couple while he was being questioned by Anchorage police and federal authorities.

Previous Page|1|||

Comments


Reader Poll

What is your stance on a proposed 1 percent sales tax to fund local school building projects?

I'm in favor of anything that will help improve school finances
I will support it if it helps to lower my property taxes
I oppose it because I don't believe it will impact property taxes and I will just pay twice
I'm against any additional taxes
I have not heard enough yet to form an opinion