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

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But he threatened to stop talking about his other victims if his name was publicly connected to the killings.

“He repeatedly indicated if his name was publicly linked he’d discontinue talking to them,” said T.J. Donovan, a Chittenden County prosecutor.

After his name surfaced in Vermont media reports, he did stop talking for a time, Coffin said.

Donovan recounted a narrative of the murders as Keyes had described them to authorities in Alaska:

On June 2, 2011, Keyes flew from Alaska to Chicago with plans to kidnap and kill, Donovan said.

He rented a car and drove east to Vermont. His reasons for picking the state and town of Essex weren’t addressed in the news conference, but authorities said he may have visited the small town east of Burlington in 2009.

Once in Essex, Keyes rented a room at the Handy Suites hotel and began looking for a target.

“He was specifically looking for a house with an attached garage, no children or a dog,” Donovan said.

Keyes was also seeking a home where he could easily predict the interior layout in order to figure out quickly where people inside were sleeping, Donovan said.

The Currier house fit that description, he said.

Keyes cut the phone lines to test whether the house had a security system. It did not.

Later, he removed a fan from a garage window, entered the garage and used a crowbar stored there to break a window to the home.

In what Donovan said Keyes described as a “blitz attack” he ran into the couple’s bedroom wearing a headlamp and tied them up with zip ties.

He took Lorraine Currier’s purse, a gun belonging to the couple and their cell phones, then forced them into their car.

He drove them to an abandoned farmhouse he’d earlier scouted and led Bill Currier into the basement, where he tied him to a stool.

When he returned to the car, Donovan said, he found that Lorraine Currier had broken free of her zip ties and was running toward the street.

Keyes tackled the woman and took her to the second floor of the farmhouse.

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