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

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In the basement, he discovered Bill Currier had partially broken the stool in an attempt to escape.

“Bill yelled, ‘Where’s my wife?’ “ Donovan said.

Keyes hit the man with a shovel and then shot him to death using a gun with a silencer, he said.

Then he returned upstairs and sexually assaulted Lorriane Currier, choking her to the point where she lost consciousness.

He took her to the basement, still alive, and strangled her to death.

After putting the couple’s bodies in separate garbage bags and leaving them in a corner of the farmhouse, he drove back to his hotel and then left Essex.

Later, he drove to Maine. On the way back, he stopped at a national forest in New Hampshire to burn some evidence.

On his drive west, Keyes threw a gun used in the crime in a reservoir. All the while, he closely tracked media reports about the missing couple.

Bill Currier, 49, was an animal care technician. His 55-year-old wife worked in patient services for a health care organization.

During interrogation, Keyes gave authorities information that had never been released to the public, such as the layout of the Currier home and descriptions of military medals found in the house and items from their car.

The farmhouse where the Curriers were killed was later torn down and its contents were hauled to a landfill, according to Vermont press reports. Despite what authorities said was the biggest-ever search of its kind in the state, the bodies of Bill and Lorraine Currier have never been recovered.

Authorities had little to say Monday about Keyes’ motivation for the murders but did say he described his actions to investigators as conscious choices.

“He wasn’t compelled by some uncontrollable force,” Coffin said. “He liked to do it.”

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