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Through his frequent attendance at Fraser's parties,<ref name="McDougal-163" /> Bonin became acquainted with a 21-year-old porcelain-factory worker, [[occult#occultism|occultist]], and part-time [[magic (illusion)|magician]] named Vernon Robert Butts<ref name=autogenerated4>{{harvnb|McDougal|1991|p=166}}</ref> and an 18-year-old [[Texas|Texan]] named Gregory Matthews Miley.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=p75dAAAAIBAJ&pg=6683,344191&dq/|title=Details Told on Capture of Gay Killer|newspaper=[[Oxnard Press-Courier]]|date=November 2, 1987|access-date=January 2, 2022}}</ref> A close friend of Fraser's, Butts had also been frequently present at his parties.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://janehowatt.com/scott-fraser-interview-part-one/|title=Scott Fraser interview- part one...|last1=Howatt|first1=Jane|date=June 23, 2020|access-date=February 17, 2022}}</ref>
Through his frequent attendance at Fraser's parties,<ref name="McDougal-163" /> Bonin became acquainted with a 21-year-old porcelain-factory worker, [[occult#occultism|occultist]], and part-time [[magic (illusion)|magician]] named Vernon Robert Butts<ref name=autogenerated4>{{harvnb|McDougal|1991|p=166}}</ref> and an 18-year-old [[Texas|Texan]] named Gregory Matthews Miley.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=p75dAAAAIBAJ&pg=6683,344191&dq/|title=Details Told on Capture of Gay Killer|newspaper=[[Oxnard Press-Courier]]|date=November 2, 1987|access-date=January 2, 2022}}</ref> A close friend of Fraser's, Butts had also been frequently present at his parties.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://janehowatt.com/scott-fraser-interview-part-one/|title=Scott Fraser interview- part one...|last1=Howatt|first1=Jane|date=June 23, 2020|access-date=February 17, 2022}}</ref>


At the time of Butts' initial acquaintance with Bonin, he had recently been fired from his employment as a magic store clerk at [[Knott's Berry Farm]] due to his unkempt appearance and increasingly eccentric and erratic behavior. Butts supplemented his income by charging $30 to appear as a magician at parties.<ref name="harvnb|McDougal|1991|p=156"/> Butts also kept two coffins in his apartment,<ref>{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1356&dat=19810207&id=pxEwAAAAIBAJ&pg=5731,3433636&hl=en|title='Freeway Killer' May Involve 44 Victims|date=February 7, 1981|publisher=[[Star–Banner|Ocala Star-Banner]]|access-date=January 30, 2022}}</ref> which he used as a bed, coffee table, telephone booth and in which he also made love to his girlfriend, a self-proclaimed witch,<ref name="harvnb|McDougal|1991|p=156"/> as well as a young boy which was witnessed by Bonin.<ref name="Pelto 2007 140">{{harvnb|Pelto|2007|p=140}}</ref> Bullied as a youth for his interests, Butts became popular among Fraser's crowd,<ref name="World's Most Evil Killers: Season 5"/> which attracted Bonin to the young man.<ref name="Pelto 2007 232-233">{{harvnb|Pelto|2007|pp=232-233}}</ref>
At the time of Butts' initial acquaintance with Bonin, he had recently been fired from his employment as a magic store clerk at [[Knott's Berry Farm]] due to his unkempt appearance and increasingly eccentric and erratic behavior. Butts supplemented his income by charging $30 to appear as a magician at parties.<ref name="harvnb|McDougal|1991|p=156"/> Butts also kept two coffins in his apartment,<ref>{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1356&dat=19810207&id=pxEwAAAAIBAJ&pg=5731,3433636&hl=en|title='Freeway Killer' May Involve 44 Victims|date=February 7, 1981|publisher=[[Star–Banner|Ocala Star-Banner]]|access-date=January 30, 2022}}</ref> which he used as a bed, coffee table, telephone booth and in which he also made love to his girlfriend, a self-proclaimed witch,<ref name="harvnb|McDougal|1991|p=156"/> as well as a young boy which was witnessed by Bonin.<ref name="Pelto 2007 140">{{harvnb|Pelto|2007|p=140}}</ref> Bullied as a youth for his interests, Butts became popular among Fraser's crowd,<ref name="World's Most Evil Killers: Season 5"/> something which impressed and attracted Bonin to Butts.<ref name="Pelto 2007 232-233">{{harvnb|Pelto|2007|pp=232-233}}</ref>


Butts claimed to have been both fascinated with and terrified of Bonin, whom he claimed held a "kind of [[hypnotic]]" control over him.<ref name="World's Most Evil Killers: Season 5"/><ref name="UPIJan111981" /> In contrast, Bonin held Butts in high regard for his social popularity, raising Bonin's poor self-esteem in regard to his difficulty socializing with others.<ref name="Pelto 2007 232">{{harvnb|Pelto|2007|pp=232}}</ref> The two soon became lovers, with Butts (a known game organizer for social gatherings) also introducing Bonin to the [[tabletop role-playing game]] [[Dungeons And Dragons]].<ref name="harvnb|McDougal|1991|p=156">{{harvnb|McDougal|1991|p=156}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://law.justia.com/cases/california/supreme-court/3d/46/659.html|title=Supreme Court of California: People v. Bonin (1988)|publisher=law.justia.com|date=August 29, 1988 |access-date=January 24, 2022}}</ref>
Butts claimed to have been both fascinated with and terrified of Bonin, whom he claimed held a "kind of [[hypnotic]]" control over him.<ref name="World's Most Evil Killers: Season 5"/><ref name="UPIJan111981" /> In contrast, Bonin held Butts in high regard for his social popularity, raising Bonin's poor self-esteem in regard to his difficulty socializing with others.<ref name="Pelto 2007 232">{{harvnb|Pelto|2007|pp=232}}</ref> The two soon became lovers, with Butts (a known game organizer for social gatherings) also introducing Bonin to the [[tabletop role-playing game]] [[Dungeons And Dragons]].<ref name="harvnb|McDougal|1991|p=156">{{harvnb|McDougal|1991|p=156}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://law.justia.com/cases/california/supreme-court/3d/46/659.html|title=Supreme Court of California: People v. Bonin (1988)|publisher=law.justia.com|date=August 29, 1988 |access-date=January 24, 2022}}</ref>

Revision as of 04:13, 19 February 2022

William Bonin
February 1980 mug shot of Bonin
Born
William George Bonin

(1947-01-08)January 8, 1947
DiedFebruary 23, 1996(1996-02-23) (aged 49)
Cause of deathExecution by lethal injection
Resting placeAshes scattered in Pacific Ocean
Other namesThe Freeway Killer
Criminal statusExecuted
Children1
RelativesRobert Bonin Sr. (father)
Alice Bonin (mother)
Robert Bonin Jr. (brother)
Paul Bonin (brother)[2]
Conviction(s)First degree murder with special circumstances (14 counts)
Robbery (3 counts)
Sodomy[1]
Criminal penaltyDeath (March 12, 1982 & August 26, 1983)
Details
Victims21–36+ (14 convicted)
Span of crimes
May 28, 1979 – June 2, 1980
CountryUnited States
State(s)California
Date apprehended
June 11, 1980
Imprisoned atSan Quentin State Prison

William George Bonin (January 8, 1947 – February 23, 1996), also known as the Freeway Killer,[3] was an American serial killer, pederast and twice-paroled sex offender[4][5] who committed the rape, torture and murder of a minimum of twenty-one young men and boys in a series of killings in southern California from May 1979 to June 1980. On at least twelve occasions, Bonin was assisted by one of his four known accomplices; he is also suspected of committing a further 15 murders.[6]

Described by the prosecutor at his first trial as "the most arch-evil person who ever existed",[7] Bonin was convicted of fourteen of the murders linked to the "Freeway Killer" in two separate trials in 1982 and 1983. He spent fourteen years on death row before he was executed by lethal injection at San Quentin State Prison in 1996. Bonin was the first inmate in California to die by this method.[8]

Bonin became known as the "Freeway Killer" due to the fact that the majority of his victims' bodies were discovered alongside numerous freeways in southern California. He shares this epithet with two separate and unrelated serial killers active in and around southern California in the 1970s: Patrick Kearney and Randy Kraft.

Early life

Childhood

William George "Bill" Bonin was born in Willimantic, Connecticut, on January 8, 1947, the second of three sons born to Robert and Alice Bonin. Bonin's father was an ill-tempered individual and a compulsive gambler who was physically abusive toward his wife in the presence of his children, and who was known to beat his sons during his wife's absence;[9][10] in contrast, his wife was an overbearing, co-dependent and passive woman who suffered from sudden and extreme mood swings[11][12] and who spent much of her free time at a bingo parlor—often as her sons remained unattended at the family home.[13][14]

Both parents severely neglected their children. Neighbors later failed to recollect either parent spending any significant time with their sons,[13][15] and occasionally gave the siblings food and clean clothes out of sympathy.[16] In addition, the brothers were often placed in the care of their grandfather, a convicted child molester who had sexually abused his daughter (Bonin's mother) until her adolescence, and who is known to have sexually abused his three grandsons.[17] Furthermore, when both parents were absent from the home, Bonin and his younger brother Paul would occasionally be left under the care of the eldest brother, Robert Jr., who often beat and belittled his siblings.[16]

In 1953, Bonin's mother placed her sons in a Catholic convent[10] in an apparent effort to protect her children from their father's escalating physical violence.[11] This convent was known to severely discipline the children it housed for both minor and major breaches of conduct, with the punishments administered including severe beatings, enduring various stress positions, and partial drowning in sinks filled with ice water. In more extreme cases, the children housed at this convent are alleged to have endured mistreatment which included having their heads dunked in toilets, being beaten until they were bloodied, and assaulted with knives.[16] Despite these forms of mistreatment, contemporary records indicate Bonin—a typically troublesome child—was observed by officials to function well under the controlled environment of this convent.[10]

In my life, I never had nobody to help me. My father used to beat the shit out of me. My mother never stopped him. She put me in one of those boy's homes, and I got raped by these older guys.
- Bonin, recollecting his childhood to psychologist Dr Vonda Pelto.[14]

Although Bonin later freely discussed many aspects of his childhood and adolescence, he refused to discuss his memories of the convent beyond divulging that he was fearful of an older boy and had consented to his sexual advances only by allowing him to first tie his hands behind his back. As neither parent visited Bonin or his brothers at the convent, he gradually began to believe his parents were dead.[18][19] Bonin was to remain at the convent until the age of nine, when he returned to live with his parents in the town of Mansfield, Connecticut.[16][20]

At the age of 10, Bonin was arrested for stealing tags from vehicle license plates;[13] he was placed in a juvenile detention center for these offenses and various other minor crimes.[21] While housed at this juvenile detention center, he was repeatedly physically and sexually assaulted by at least one older boy[13] and an adult counselor who had been assigned to control and monitor the juvenile offenders.[17][22][23][n 1] Shortly after Bonin's release from this juvenile detention center, he began sexually fondling his younger brother.[19][24]

Adolescence

Bonin, pictured in the North High School yearbook, c. 1963

Due to the gambling addiction of Bonin's father (which resulted in the prospect of the foreclosure of the family home), Bonin's parents opted to relocate from Connecticut to California in 1961. The family rented a modest tract home at 10802 Angell Street in Downey, California.[25][26][11]

Bonin attended North High School in Torrance, where he was regarded as a social outcast who scarcely interacted with his peers. His primary hobby as a teen was bowling; this hobby would last throughout the course of his teenage years.[27][28] According to Bonin, he was something of a shy loner who generally felt uncomfortable in the presence of his peers. Consequently, Bonin never made friends.[29][18] He was also self-conscious of his facial features, and refused to smile in public because of his misaligned teeth.[29]

By his teenage years, Bonin had developed an unrelenting and obsessive interest in pedophilia,[23] also discovering his homosexuality upon reaching puberty. His sexuality became the basis of a long-standing conflict with his mother, who believed his homosexual inclinations to be a curable social disorder.[23][10] Very seldomly, Bonin attempted to publicly court and/or interact with females as an adolescent. On one occasion, he was humiliated and rejected by a girl whom he had worked up his courage to approach and ask for a date. This incident wounded his self-esteem and increased Bonin's belief that he "just couldn't make it with girls;" he resolved to never allow a female to hurt him this deeply again.[30]

In addition to sexually fondling his younger brother, Bonin is known to have molested several neighborhood children while the family lived on Angell Street,[24] many of whom were lured into Bonin's home—occasionally as his mother was present in the household—with the promise of alcohol and/or viewing pornography. Neighbors later recollected frequently observing young boys accompany Bonin into the residence, some of whom they would later hear screaming and crying. As a result, Bonin earned a reputation as a child molester among local residents.[31]

In addition to these acts of molestation, Bonin is known to have committed several acts of robbery, petty theft, and grand theft in his teenage years.[19] Bonin's mother—allegedly extremely emotionally controlling and protective of her son—is known to have refused to acknowledge these acts of molestation and the general escalating antisocial behavior exhibited by her son throughout his adolescence.[11]

Engagement and U.S. Air Force

Shortly after graduating from high school in 1965, Bonin became engaged to marry; this engagement had largely been at the behest of his mother,[29] who believed the prospect of marriage would quell her son's evident homosexuality.[10] Later the same year, his mother persuaded him to join the United States Air Force;[9] he served five months of active duty in the Vietnam War as an aerial gunner and logging over 700 hours of combat and patrol time.[32]

Bonin was to later claim that his experiences in Vietnam instilled a belief within him that human life is overvalued.[33] On one occasion, while under enemy fire, Bonin risked his own life to save the life of a wounded fellow airman.[34] For this act, he received a medal in recognition of his gallantry.[35][36] According to Bonin, he engaged in sexual relations with both males and females in Vietnam,[37] although he later admitted to sexually assaulting two fellow soldiers at gunpoint during the period of the Tet Offensive.[38][12]

Bonin served three years in the Air Force before receiving an honorable discharge in October 1968 at age 21.[9] He returned to Downey to live with his mother.[10] Upon returning home, Bonin discovered that his fiancée—who by this stage had given birth to their son[3]—had left him to marry another man.[10] He would later summarize his relationship with this young woman as a "big mistake"[29] and a personal failure of his primarily fueled by his mother's pressuring of him.[9]

First convictions

On November 17, 1968, Bonin committed a sexual assault on a 14-year-old boy.[39] He was to commit three further sexual assaults upon boys and youths over the following four months. The victims of these four assaults were aged between 12 and 18[40] and in each instance, he bound or otherwise restrained his victim before forcibly engaging in sodomy, oral copulation,[41] and methods of torture which included bludgeoning about the head with a tire iron and the squeezing of his victims' testicles.[42]

In early 1969, Bonin was arrested as he attempted to restrain a 16-year-old youth whom he had lured into his vehicle;[n 2] he was indicted on five counts of kidnapping, four counts of sodomy, one count of oral copulation, and one count of child molestation against the five individuals he had abducted and assaulted or—in the case of the final youth he had abducted—attempted to assault since the previous November.[23] Bonin pleaded guilty to molestation and forced oral copulation and was sentenced to the Atascadero State Hospital as a mentally disordered sexual offender considered amenable to treatment in January 1971.[40]

While detained at Atascadero hospital, Bonin was subjected to a battery of psychiatric examinations[44] which revealed that he possessed a higher than average IQ of 121, and displayed traits of manic depression in addition to damage to the prefrontal cortex of his brain—which would likely reduce his ability to restrain any violent impulses. Bonin's physical examinations also revealed extensive scars on his head and buttocks, which he had likely sustained in the three years he had been housed at the Connecticut juvenile detention center, although he claimed to have no memory of how he had acquired these injuries,[42] leading many experts to conclude Bonin repressed memories of the more extreme aspects of his childhood abuse.[19] These professionals also noted the psychological and emotional implications of Bonin's unhealthy relationship with his domineering mother, upon whom he was emotionally dependent despite her low opinion of him.[23]

Bonin regularly attended therapy groups and volunteered to partake in experimental programs at the Atascadero hospital; he was considered a non-violent, helpful and conscientious patient.[10] Perceiving that he could manipulate psychiatrists into granting him an early release, Bonin soon began reciting what psychiatrists desired to hear from him.[45] Nonetheless, two years after his arrival at Atascadero State Hospital, Bonin was sent to prison, having been declared unsuitable for further treatment largely due to his repeated sexual engagement with two mentally challenged inmates.[10] He was released from prison on June 11, 1974, after doctors concluded he was "no longer a danger to the health and safety of others."[44]

Further offenses and imprisonment

Three months after Bonin's release from prison, on September 8, 1974, he encountered a 14-year-old hitchhiker named David Allen McVicker in Garden Grove.[46] McVicker accepted Bonin's offer to drive him to his parents' home in Huntington Beach. Shortly after entering Bonin's vehicle, Bonin asked McVicker if he was gay and whether he had ever engaged in homosexual activity.[18] When McVicker asked Bonin to stop his car, Bonin produced a gun and drove McVicker to a deserted field, where he ordered the teenager to undress before proceeding to beat and rape him in the front seat of his Opel Kadett.[18][47] After assaulting McVicker, Bonin began to strangle the teenager with his own T-shirt, although when McVicker began pleading for his life, Bonin ceased attempting to kill him.[18] He then drove McVicker home before casually stating, "We'll meet again."[48]

McVicker cried for several hours before calling a child abuse hotline. He then phoned his mother, who immediately drove home from work and informed Garden Grove police of the incident.[23] Shortly thereafter, Bonin was charged with the rape and forcible oral copulation of a minor, and the attempted abduction of a 15-year-old which had occurred two days after Bonin's assault on McVicker.[49] In this second instance, Bonin had sexually propositioned the 15-year-old, who had rejected Bonin's offer of $35 for sex before abruptly exiting his car. In response, Bonin attempted to strike the youth with his vehicle.[40]

Bonin pleaded guilty to both charges and on December 31, 1975; he was sentenced to serve between one and fifteen years' imprisonment, to be served at the California Men's Facility in San Luis Obispo. He was released from detention on October 11, 1978, albeit with eighteen months' supervised probation.[50]

Release

Upon his release, Bonin moved to an apartment complex in Downey located approximately one mile from his parents' house. He soon established a reputation among teenage boys in his neighborhood as a gregarious individual who bought alcohol for minors and allowed them to socialize in his apartment.[51] Bonin also began dating a young woman whom, he informed acquaintances, he regularly accompanied to Anaheim on Sundays to participate in her hobby of roller skating.[52]

In late 1978, Bonin became acquainted with a 43-year-old neighbor named Everett Scott Fraser.[10] Bonin soon became a regular attendee at Fraser's weekend parties where young men, drugs, and alcohol were rife.[53] Fraser considered Bonin a respectful, polite and placid individual to whom he frequently introduced his acquaintances,[10] with the two also exchanging stories of their homosexual exploits and penchant for sex with teenage boys.[53]

In 1979, Bonin obtained employment as a truck driver at a Montebello delivery firm named Dependable Drive-Away, earning $5 an hour.[52][53]

Acquaintance with Vernon Butts

I met Vernon Butts [and] I admired him. He had it all together. Everybody liked him; it was cool having him like me ... made me feel real important. I never had no friends.
- Bonin, describing his acquaintance with Vernon Butts to psychologist Dr Vonda Pelto.[29]

Through his frequent attendance at Fraser's parties,[52] Bonin became acquainted with a 21-year-old porcelain-factory worker, occultist, and part-time magician named Vernon Robert Butts[54] and an 18-year-old Texan named Gregory Matthews Miley.[55] A close friend of Fraser's, Butts had also been frequently present at his parties.[56]

At the time of Butts' initial acquaintance with Bonin, he had recently been fired from his employment as a magic store clerk at Knott's Berry Farm due to his unkempt appearance and increasingly eccentric and erratic behavior. Butts supplemented his income by charging $30 to appear as a magician at parties.[57] Butts also kept two coffins in his apartment,[58] which he used as a bed, coffee table, telephone booth and in which he also made love to his girlfriend, a self-proclaimed witch,[57] as well as a young boy which was witnessed by Bonin.[59] Bullied as a youth for his interests, Butts became popular among Fraser's crowd,[18] something which impressed and attracted Bonin to Butts.[60]

Butts claimed to have been both fascinated with and terrified of Bonin, whom he claimed held a "kind of hypnotic" control over him.[18][61] In contrast, Bonin held Butts in high regard for his social popularity, raising Bonin's poor self-esteem in regard to his difficulty socializing with others.[29] The two soon became lovers, with Butts (a known game organizer for social gatherings) also introducing Bonin to the tabletop role-playing game Dungeons And Dragons.[57][62]

Shortly after their acquaintance, Bonin suggested the two should rape and murder a teenage hitchhiker.[18] Butts was amenable to this suggestion, and later freely admitted to taking great delight in watching Bonin abuse and torture his victims in the rear of his van as he (Butts) drove the vehicle.[63] Miley—an illiterate Texas native with an IQ of 56 who supported himself with casual work—also actively participated in two murders he accompanied Bonin upon.[64] Bonin himself later confessed to a psychologist his feeling a sense of social belonging with his accomplices that he had never previously experienced.[18]

Murder spree

A second-generation Ford Econoline van. Bonin drove an olive-green model of this van when committing his abductions.

Bonin usually selected young male hitchhikers, schoolboys or, occasionally, male prostitutes as his victims. The victims, aged 12 to 19, were predominantly slender, fair-skinned youths with long hair,[65] whom he either enticed or forced into his Ford Econoline van,[66][67] where they were overpowered and bound hand and foot with a combination of handcuffs[68] and wire or cords.[69] They were then sexually assaulted, extensively beaten about the face, torso, head and genitals, and tortured before typically being killed by strangulation with their own T-shirts, although some victims were stabbed or battered to death.[n 3] One victim, Darin Kendrick, was forced to drink hydrochloric acid; three victims had ice-picks driven into their ears[71] and another victim, Mark Shelton, died of shock.[72]

According to one attorney present throughout Bonin's subsequent confessions, the escalating levels of brutality he had exhibited toward his victims had been similar to that of a drug addict requiring an ever-greater increase of dosage to attain a satisfactory level of euphoria;[73] Bonin himself later emphasized to neurologists that he had felt an intense sense of excitement as he drove in search of his victims[74]—being scarcely able to await the onset of dusk to begin his cruising.[19]

In order to minimize the chances of a potential victim escaping from his vehicle, Bonin removed all inner handles from the passenger-side and rear doors of his van, and stowed ligatures, knives, household tools and other instruments in his vehicle to facilitate the restraining and torture of his victims. The victims were usually killed inside his van before their bodies were discarded alongside or close to various freeways in southern California.[75]

In a minimum of twelve of the murders, Bonin—who considered murder a "group sport"[76]—was assisted by one or more of his four known accomplices.[77][78]

First murder and initial arrest

The first murder for which Bonin was charged was that of a 13-year-old named Thomas Glen Lundgren.[79] Lundgren was last seen leaving his parents' house in Reseda at 10:50 a.m. on May 28, 1979. Shortly before his abduction, Lundgren had reportedly told friends a man had offered to meet him at a skatepark to take photos of him for a skateboarding magazine.[80][81] His body, clad only in a T-shirt, shoes and socks, was found the same afternoon in Agoura.[68] An autopsy revealed that Lundgren had suffered emasculation and bludgeoning to his face and head, with his skull sustaining multiple fractures. In addition, the youth had been slashed across the throat, extensively stabbed about the chest and stomach, and strangled to death.[68] His underwear, jeans, and severed genitals—bearing several bite marks[71]—were discovered strewn in a field close to his body. In the abduction and murder of Lundgren, Bonin was assisted by Butts, who is suspected of accompanying or assisting Bonin on at least eight further murders attributed to the "Freeway Killer".

In mid-1979, Bonin was again arrested for molesting a 17-year-old boy in the coastal community of Dana Point.[52] This violation of the conditions of his parole should have resulted in Bonin being returned to prison; however, an administrative error committed prior to Bonin's scheduled court date resulted in his release.[52] Fraser drove to collect Bonin from the Orange County Jail where he had been incarcerated. He later recollected that as he drove Bonin home, Bonin made a statement which Fraser had interpreted at the time as an expression of remorse: "No one's going to testify again. This is never going to happen to me again."[82]

Freeway Killer murders

Two months after the murder of Lundgren, on August 4, 1979, Bonin and Butts abducted a 17-year-old named Mark Shelton shortly after the youth left his Westminster home to walk to a movie theater near Beach Boulevard.[83] Screams were heard from the vicinity of the Shelton household by neighbors, leaving a strong possibility Shelton was abducted by force.[84] The youth was violated with foreign objects including a pool cue, causing his body to enter a state of shock which proved fatal.[85] His body was then discarded in San Bernardino County.[86]

The Pacific Coast Highway. Victim Markus Grabs was abducted while hitchhiking alongside this highway on August 5, 1979.

The following day, Bonin and Butts encountered a 17-year-old West German student named Markus Grabs attempting to hitchhike from the Pacific Coast Highway. Grabs was bound with lengths of cord and ignition wire and driven to Bonin's home,[83] where he was sodomized, beaten, and stabbed a total of 77 times[83] before his nude body was discarded in Malibu Creek, close to Las Virgenes Canyon Road. His body was found the following morning, with one investigator likening the network of injuries inflicted upon the victim to that of a rabid dog unable to determine when to cease biting.[83][87]

On August 27, Bonin and Butts abducted a 15-year-old Hollywood youth named Donald Ray Hyden. Hyden was last seen alive walking along Santa Monica Boulevard at 1 a.m.;[88] his body was found by construction workers later that same morning in a dumpster located near the offramp of the Ventura Freeway. Prior to his death by ligature strangulation, Hyden had been bound, beaten about the face, sodomized, then stabbed in the neck and genitalia and bludgeoned about the skull. Evident attempts had also been made to remove his testicles and slash his throat.[68]

Two weeks after the murder of Hyden, on September 9, Bonin and Butts encountered a 17-year-old La Mirada youth named David Louis Murillo cycling to a movie theater.[89] Murillo was lured into Bonin's van, where he was bound, repeatedly raped, extensively bludgeoned about the skull with a tire iron,[90] then strangled with a ligature before his nude body was thrown over an embankment into a bed of ivy alongside Highway 101.[68] Eight days after the murder of Murillo, on September 17, an 18-year-old Newport Beach youth named Robert Christopher Wirostek was abducted as he cycled to his job at a grocery store; his body was found on September 27[91] alongside Interstate 10.[92]

Bonin is not known to have killed again until on or about November 1, when he and Butts abducted and murdered an unidentified young man with brown hair, between 5 ft 1 in and 5 ft 6 in in height, and estimated to be between 15 and 27 years old.[93] This victim was savagely beaten, then strangled to death before his body was discarded in an irrigation ditch alongside State Route 99, south of Bakersfield.[94] Although never identified, Bonin later estimated the age of this victim to be 23, and freely admitted to inserting an ice pick into this victim's nostrils and ear prior to his murder.[95]

Approximately four weeks later, Bonin—operating alone—abducted and strangled a 17-year-old Bellflower youth named Frank Dennis Fox;[96] his body was found two days later alongside the Ortega Highway, five miles east of San Juan Capistrano.[97] The body itself bore signs of extensive blunt force trauma to the face and head, with ligature marks on the wrists and ankles indicating Fox had been bound throughout his ordeal. No clothing or other identifying evidence was discovered at the scene. Ten days after the murder of Fox, a 15-year-old Long Beach youth named John Fredrick Kilpatrick disappeared after leaving his parents' home to socialize with friends. Kilpatrick was strangled to death before his body was discarded in a remote area of Rialto.[98] His body was found on December 13; Kilpatrick remained known as a John Doe until August 5, 1980.[99]

On January 1, 1980, Bonin brutalized and strangled a 16-year-old Ontario youth named Michael Francis McDonald; his fully clothed body was found alongside Highway 71 in western San Bernardino County two days after his murder,[92][100] although his body was not identified until March 24.[101]

Participation of Gregory Miley

File:Charles Miranda James Macabe February 3 1980 Freeway KillerA.jpg
Charles Miranda (left) and James Macabe. Bonin was assisted by accomplice Gregory Miley in both murders on February 3, 1980.

On February 3, Bonin drove from Downey to Hollywood in the company of 18-year-old Miley with the specific intention of committing a further murder. The pair encountered a 15-year-old named Charles Miranda standing close to the Starwood nightclub,[102] hitchhiking along Santa Monica Boulevard.[103] According to Miley, Bonin and Miranda engaged in consensual sexual activity in the rear of the van as he drove, before Bonin then whispered to Miley, "Kid's going to die."[104]

Miranda was then overpowered by Bonin, who then asked the youth how much money he had in his possession. When Miranda responded he had "about six dollars", Bonin ordered Miley to take the youth's wallet,[104] before beating Miranda and knocking him down; Miranda was then bound and gagged by Bonin,[105] who proceeded to sexually assault him. Miley also attempted to rape the youth, but was unable to sustain an erection. In frustration, Miley assaulted Miranda with various sharp objects before assisting Bonin in beating the youth. Bonin then strangled Miranda to death with a T-shirt and a tire iron as Miley repeatedly jumped on Miranda's chest. His nude corpse was then dumped in an alleyway alongside East Second Street in Los Angeles.[64]

Five minutes after the pair had discarded Miranda's body, Bonin suggested to Miley: "I'm horny again, let's go and do another one."[105] A few hours later, in Huntington Beach, the pair encountered 12-year-old James Macabe[105] at a bus stop on the corner of Beach Boulevard and Slater Avenue. Macabe was lured into Bonin's van on the promise he would be driven to his intended destination of Disneyland with the additional incentive of marijuana.[106] According to Miley, the boy entered the rear of the van voluntarily as Bonin drove to a grocery store parking lot, where he parked the van and entered the rear of the vehicle where he began hugging and kissing the child.[106] He then proceeded to bind resisting Macabe, informing him that he is being kidnapped and asking how much money he could extort for ransom.[107] He then began repeatedly punching him in the stomach, mouth, and leg.[106] Miley then drove in an aimless manner for what he later described as being a "very, very long distance".[102]

As he drove, Miley continually heard Macabe crying as Bonin bludgeoned him with a tire iron about the head before proceeding to rape him;[108][109] Bonin then forced the boy to sleep in his arms.[110] Upon Macabe's waking, Miley then joined Bonin in beating the child into unconsciousness simply because he "felt like" doing so before Bonin crushed Macabe's neck with a tire iron.[107][105] Bonin then strangled Macabe to death with his own T-shirt before the pair discarded his corpse alongside a dumpster at a construction site in Walnut City.[106] Macabe's body was discovered three days later, fully clothed and bearing several skull fractures and a bruised penis.[108]

On February 4, Bonin was arrested for violating the conditions of his parole; he was remanded in custody at the Orange County Jail until March 4.[111]

Subsequent killings

Ten days after Bonin had been released from custody, on March 14, he abducted and killed an 18-year-old Van Nuys youth named Ronald Gatlin. Gatlin was abducted shortly after he had left a friend's home. He was beaten, sodomized and suffered several deep, perforating ice pick wounds to the ear and neck before being strangled with a ligature.[39] Gatlin's body, bound hand and foot, was found the following day in the city of Duarte. One week later, on March 21, Bonin lured a 14-year-old named Glenn Barker into his van as the teenager hitchhiked to school. Barker was also raped, beaten and strangled to death with a ligature; his body also bore evidence of numerous burns to the neck which had been inflicted with a lit cigarette.[110] In addition, Barker had been violated with foreign objects which had extensively distended his rectum.[112] At 4 p.m. the same day, a 15-year-old named Russell Rugh was abducted from a bus stop in Garden Grove. Rugh was bound, beaten and strangled to death after an estimated eight hours of captivity[113] before his body was discarded alongside that of Barker in Cleveland National Forest, close to the Ortega Highway.[72] The youths' nude bodies were found on March 23.[114]

Encounter with William Pugh

One Friday evening in March 1980, Bonin offered a 17-year-old named William Ray Pugh a ride home as the pair left Fraser's residence.[115] Within minutes of accepting the ride, Bonin asked Pugh whether he would like to engage in sex with him. Pugh later stated he panicked and stuttered upon hearing this question and, after sitting in silence for several minutes, attempted to leave the vehicle once Bonin had slowed the van at a stoplight. In response, Bonin wordlessly leaned across and grabbed Pugh by the collar, dragging him back into the passenger seat.[116] According to Pugh, Bonin then confided in him that he enjoyed abducting young male hitchhikers on Friday and Saturday nights, whom he then restrained and abused before strangling them to death with their own T-shirts. In a matter-of-fact tone, Bonin then informed Pugh: "If you want to kill somebody, you should make a plan and find a place to dump the body before you even pick a victim."[76] Bonin then informed Pugh he had not chosen to refrain from assaulting and killing him out of sentiment; he'd been spared because the pair had been seen leaving Fraser's party together.[117] Pugh was driven to his home without being assaulted.[118]

Murder of Harry Turner

File:Harry Todd Turner Freeway Killer March 1980A.jpg
Harry Turner. Bonin was assisted by William Pugh in Turner's murder on March 24, 1980.

On March 24, Bonin and Pugh abducted a 15-year-old runaway named Harry Todd Turner from a Los Angeles street. Turner had absconded from a boys' home in the desert community of Lancaster[64][119] four days prior to his meeting Bonin and Pugh. Pugh was to later testify that he and Bonin lured Turner into Bonin's van with an offer of $20 for sex.[120] After binding, sodomizing and biting the youth,[64] Bonin ordered Pugh to "beat him (Turner) up." After Pugh had bludgeoned and beat Turner about the head and body for several minutes,[120] Bonin strangled the youth to death with his own T-shirt before discarding his body at the rear delivery door to a Los Angeles business. Turner's autopsy subsequently revealed the youth's genitals had been mutilated, and he had received a total of eight fractures to the skull inflicted by a blunt instrument before he had been strangled.[64]

Later killings

On the afternoon of April 10, Bonin offered a 16-year-old Bellflower youth named Steven John Wood—who had finished his morning shift at a local restaurant—a ride on the corner of the Woodruff and Foster roads as the youth walked to school. Having been previously introduced to Bonin through his older brother Carl, Wood accepted the offer.[121] his nude, hogtied and extensively beaten body was discarded nigh to a dumpster with the head resting on a nearby bench in an alleyway located on 740 West Esther in Long Beach,[122] close to the Pacific Coast Highway.[123] No clothing or other identifying evidence was discovered at the scene. Wood's autopsy revealed the youth had been killed by ligature strangulation after enduring extensive beating.[123][124]

Three weeks later, on April 29, while parked in the grounds of a Stanton supermarket close to Butts' former workplace, Bonin lured a 19-year-old supermarket employee named Darin Kendrick into his van on the pretext of selling the youth drugs.[125][126] Bonin then drove to Butts' apartment in Lakewood, where the trio began listening to music as they sat on the couch. Bonin then asked whether Kendrick was gay, prompting Kendrick to attempt an escape from the apartment.[127] Kendrick was then overpowered and bound by both men[83] before being sodomized by Butts as Bonin raised the volume of Butts' sound system to silence Kendrick's screams. Butts then held Kendrick's mouth open while Bonin poured chloral hydrate down Kendrick's throat, causing the youth to sustain caustic chemical burns to his mouth, chin, stomach and chest.[77][128]

The kid started [fading] out, just kind of [whimpering]. I don't like [fucking] some limp piece of meat. It's no fun if they don't let me know how it feels. Guess we [gave] him too much of the stuff. Next time I figured I wouldn't use as much. Anyways, I'd gotten my rocks off and the kid was [getting boring], no fun anymore, so I strangled him.

- Bonin on the Darin Lee Kendrick murder[128]

Kendrick—who had been biting the two—then halted his resistance as he vomited onto the apartment floor; he then complained of dizziness. Seeing that he was losing consciousnsess in a state of whimpering, Bonin obtained an orgasm, then strangled Kendrick out of apparent boredom.[128] Butts then drove an ice pick into Kendrick's ear, causing a fatal wound to the youth's cervical spinal cord.[39] His body was discarded behind a warehouse close to the Artesia Freeway,[83] with the ice pick Butts had driven into his skull still protruding from his ear.[126]

On May 12,[41][129] Bonin abducted and murdered a 17-year-old acquaintance whom he later stated he had decided to kill when he had awoken that morning because he was "tired of having him around".[130][131] The body of this acquaintance,[n 4] Lawrence Sharp,[43] was discarded behind a Westminster gas station. His body was found on May 18, and his autopsy revealed that in addition to being bound and sodomized, Sharp had been extensively beaten about the face and body, then strangled with a ligature.[132] One week after the murder of Sharp, on May 19, Bonin asked Butts to accompany him on a killing; on this occasion, however, Butts reportedly refused to accompany him. Operating alone, Bonin abducted a 14-year-old South Gate youth named Sean King from a bus stop in Downey, killed him, then discarded his body in Live Oak Canyon, Yucaipa.[133] Bonin then visited Butts' residence and bragged of the killing to his accomplice.[92]

Acquaintance with James Munro

Nine days after the murder of King, on May 28, Bonin invited an 18-year-old homeless drifter named James Michael Munro to move into the apartment he shared with his mother and older brother, but only in exchange for sex. Munro was a runaway from St. Clair, Michigan who had been evicted from his family's home in early 1980.[134] Munro had planned on meeting a friend in California, but gradually "ended up living on the streets." By May 1980, he had been working as a male prostitute in Hollywood for several weeks.[135]

While at the Angell Street residence, Munro-a bisexual who preferred sexual relations with females-began a consensual sexual relationship with Bonin. He also accepted a subsequent offer of employment at the Montebello delivery firm where Bonin worked, and was allowed by Bonin to drive his van on occasion.[136] Munro later described his initial impression of Bonin as being "a good guy; really normal",[137] although on the evening of June 1, Bonin abruptly informed Munro he wanted the two of them to abduct, rape, and kill a teenage hitchhiker.[138]

Surveillance

By early 1980, the murders committed by Bonin and his accomplices were receiving considerable media attention, and a reward totaling $50,000 for information leading to the conviction of the perpetrator or perpetrators had been offered by leading gay rights activists.[139] Bonin avidly followed news media reports pertaining to his crimes, and collected newspaper clippings documenting his own manhunt.[140]

Having by this stage determined a definitive link between many of the murders committed within the previous year, investigators from the various jurisdictions where victims had been abducted or discovered had themselves begun sharing information in their collective hunt for the perpetrator. Six officers from three of the jurisdictions in which the "Freeway Killer" had most regularly either abducted or deposited the bodies of his victims formed a task force dedicated to the apprehension of the suspect or suspects who, as one of the officers upon this assembled task force later recalled, was striking at an average rate of once every two weeks in the spring of 1980.[141]

By May 1980, Pugh had been arrested for auto theft and was housed at the Los Padrinos Juvenile Courthouse.[142] On May 28, he overheard the details of the ongoing murders on a local radio broadcast and confided to a counselor his recognition of the perpetrator's modus operandi as being that described to him by Bonin two months previous.[143] This counselor reported Pugh's suspicions to the police, who in turn relayed the information to a Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) homicide sergeant named John St. John.[143] Upon hearing the confidential tip from the counselor, St. John conducted an extensive interview with Pugh the following day. Although Pugh withheld the fact that he had actually accompanied Bonin on one of his murders, the information he provided led St. John to deduce that Bonin may indeed be the Freeway Killer.[144][n 5]

A police investigation into Bonin's background revealed his extensive history of convictions for sexually assaulting teenage boys. St. John assigned a surveillance team to monitor Bonin's movements. The surveillance of Bonin began on the evening of June 2, 1980;[147] one hour prior to Bonin and Munro's return home after dumping Wells' body.[148]

Murder of Steven Wells

Hours prior to the implementation of police surveillance upon Bonin on the evening of June 2,[54] Bonin, accompanied by Munro,[54] encountered an 18-year-old print shop worker named Steven Jay Wells standing at a bus stop on El Segundo Boulevard. Bonin and Munro enticed the youth into the van. According to Bonin and Munro, upon learning Wells was bisexual, Bonin engaged in consensual relations with Wells in the rear of his van before persuading the youth to accompany him to his parents' house, where the two engaged in further sexual relations on Bonin's parents' bed.[n 6] Bonin then sent Munro to purchase burgers.[149] Upon Munro's return, Bonin convinced Wells to allow himself to be bound upon the incentive of $200. Munro then entered the room, to which Bonin offered Wells $200 to allow Munro to have sex with him. Suspicious, Wells became frantic.[150]

Bonin then informed Munro they were to both kill Wells before proceeding to gag and beat his captive, stating, "You're going to do what I tell you to do" as Wells began pleading for his life. Bonin then stole $10 from Wells' wallet[151] before stating his intention to leave his body "on a park bench somewhere".[152] He then strangled Wells to death with a T-shirt and tire iron[19][143] before ordering Munro to retrieve a cardboard box from his brother's room; the two placed Wells' body inside this cardboard box, which they carried to Bonin's van.[153][138]

Bonin then drove to Butts' Lakewood apartment as he informed Munro that he, Butts, and others had committed many of the Freeway Killer murders. At Butts' apartment, Bonin first invited him to view Wells' body with the enticement:[59] "We got it in the van; it's a good one. Come on out and see it." According to Munro, Butts—who had been cosplaying as the sci-fi franchise Star Wars' Darth Vader—replied upon viewing and poking the body, "Oh, you got another one!" He further went on to compliment Bonin, expressing that he was proud of Bonin, stating, "Good job, Billy, you really did a good one."[59]

Bonin subsequently asked for advice as to how to dispose of it. At Bonin's subsequent trial, Munro recalled Butts recommending they discard Wells near a gas station. Munro also later testified that Butts had actively dissuaded Bonin from discarding the youth's body in the nearby canyons due to the late hour, and police presence caused by recent media coverage.[151] On the way to finding a spot to dump the body, Bonin and Munro encountered a police car, in which Bonin jokingly quipped, "Hey [mister] pig man, you [ought to] see what we got here."[154] They located a disused Huntington Beach gas station, where they urinated and inspected the area;[154] Wells' discarded body was found five hours later.[155] Upon returning to the Angell Street residence, Bonin bit into his Big Mac burger before looking up to the ceiling and stating, "Thanks, Steve," and repeating the statement as he looked down to the floor, adding, "Wherever you are."[151] He and Munro then proceeded to laugh.

Arrest

After nine days of surveillance, on June 11, 1980, police observed Bonin driving in a seemingly random manner throughout Hollywood, unsuccessfully attempting to lure five separate teenage boys into his van,[156] before succeeding in luring a youth into his vehicle. The police followed Bonin until his van parked in a desolate parking lot close to the Hollywood Freeway, then discreetly approached the vehicle. Upon hearing muffled screams and banging sounds emanating from inside the van, these plainclothes officers forced their way into the vehicle;[157] discovering Bonin in the act of raping a 17-year-old Orange County runaway named Harold Eugene Tate, whom he had handcuffed and bound.[156][158][159]

Initially charged with the rape of a minor[160] and held on suspicion of the murder of Miranda,[161][162] Bonin was detained in lieu of $250,000 bond. His girlfriend subsequently notified his boss of the arrest, causing Munro—already apprehensive at Bonin's absence from work—to become frantic.[163] The following day, Munro stole Bonin's car and fled to his native St. Clair, Michigan,[164] where he resided temporarily with a friend before his arrest.[165]

Inside Bonin's van, investigators discovered numerous artifacts attesting to his culpability in the Freeway Killer murders. These items included various restraining devices including lengths of nylon cord, an assortment of knives, a tire iron, and household implements such as pliers and coat hangers. Furthermore, the interior of Bonin's van and sections of his home were extensively bloodstained,[130] and the inner handles from the passenger-side and rear doors of his vehicle had been removed in an obvious effort to prevent victims from escaping the vehicle. Inside the glove box, investigators also discovered a scrapbook of newspaper clippings related to the murders.[166]

Confession

Although initially protesting his innocence in any of the murders, Bonin confessed his guilt to St. John after reading an impassioned letter from the mother of King, imploring him to reveal the location of her son's body.[167] Over the course of several evenings, Bonin confessed to abducting, raping, and killing 21 boys and young men. He expressed no remorse for his actions, but he did demonstrate extreme embarrassment and regret over having been caught.[168] Bonin stated to authorities that his primary accomplice in the murders had been Butts, with Miley and Munro being active accomplices in other murders.[169] Bonin later told one reporter who asked him what he would be doing if he were still at large: "I'd still be killing, I couldn't stop killing. It got easier with each one we did."[170]

Bonin was physically linked to many of the murders by blood and semen stains,[130] and numerous, distinctive green triskelion-shaped carpet fibers found upon seven of the victims' bodies which were forensically proven to be a precise match with the carpeting in the rear of Bonin's van.[6] Furthermore, upon three victims' bodies, investigators had discovered hair samples which had proven to be a precise match with Bonin. Medical evidence also revealed that six of the murders for which Bonin was charged were committed by a unique windlass strangulation method, which was referred to by the prosecutor at Bonin's Los Angeles County trial as "a signature, a trademark."

Initially formally arraigned for the murder of Grabs on July 25,[171] by July 29, Bonin had been charged with an additional fifteen murders to which he had confessed and upon which the prosecution believed they had sufficient evidence to obtain a conviction.[162] In addition to the sixteen murder indictments, Bonin was also charged with eleven counts of robbery, one count of sodomy, and one count of mayhem. He was held without bond,[172] and on August 8, these charges were formally submitted against him. Three days later, in accordance with Penal Code section 987, Bonin, at this stage without legal representation, was appointed an attorney named Earl Hanson to act as his legal representative. Hanson remained Bonin's attorney until October 1981 when, at Bonin's request, he was replaced by William Charvet and Tracy Stewart.[107]

Accomplices' arrest

Mug shots taken of William Bonin (left) and Vernon Butts (right) after their arrest

Based on Bonin's confession, police obtained a warrant authorizing a search of Butts' Lakewood property on the same date as Bonin's initial arraignment; this July 25 search uncovered evidence linking Butts to several of the murders to which Bonin had already confessed, and Butts was brought before a Municipal Court on July 29, charged with accompanying Bonin on six murders committed between August 1979 and April 1980. He was also charged with three counts of robbery. In a press statement relating to the police investigation into the murders issued on this date, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department stated: "Bonin and Butts are believed to be responsible for the kidnapping, torture and murder of at least 21 young males between May 1979 and June 1980", before adding that five further murder charges would likely be filed against the men in Orange County.[173]

Despite initially proclaiming his innocence, Butts confessed to having accompanied Bonin upon each of the murder forays listed in each of the charges against him, and to have actively participated in the sexual abuse of several victims. In his confession, Butts claimed to have participated in the murders primarily out of fear, claiming, "It was either go, or become the next victim",[174] adding he only found the courage to confess upon learning Bonin was in custody. Butts was adamant he had had only a limited role in the actual torture of the victims, but confessed to actively participating in the torture of one victim.[174]

We picked up the boy, [we] took him out to the middle of nowhere and had sex with him and then he [Bonin] killed him. ... Bill [Bonin] said he loved those sounds of [screaming]. ... After the first one I couldn't do anything about it.

- Butts on a murder committed with Bonin[175]

Discussing the actual murder forays, Butts claimed that, upon successfully luring a victim into the van, he typically drove in an aimless manner[61] as Bonin abused and tortured his victims in the rear of the van,[71] then stopped the vehicle in order to assist in restraining the victim as Bonin escalated the torture.[65] When asked as to why some victims had been subjected to more extensive blunt force trauma than others, Butts stated that, in many instances, Bonin would escalate the level of beatings to which he subjected his victim if the youth resisted his sexual advances.[176]

Butts was brought before Orange County Municipal Court Judge Richard Orozco on November 14, 1980. On this date, he was formally charged with participating in three further murders committed in this county.[177] His trial was scheduled for July 27, 1981.[61]

Mug shot of Gregory Miley, taken following his extradition to L.A. County, August 1980

On July 31, Munro was arrested in his hometown of Port Huron, Michigan; he was extradited to California and charged with the murder of Wells.[178] Munro pleaded innocent to all charges against him on August 14.[179] On August 22, Miley—by this stage 19 years old—was arrested in Texas and subsequently charged by California authorities with the murders of Miranda and Macabe. Miley was arrested after having confessed to his culpability in the Miranda and Macabe murders in a recorded phone conversation with a friend (thus substantiating Bonin's earlier confession).[180] He initially pleaded innocent to two charges of first-degree murder on December 18,[102] but pleaded guilty at two separate pretrial hearings in May 1981.[181]

Preliminary hearings

At a preliminary hearing held in Los Angeles County before Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Julius Leetham on January 2, 1981, Bonin formally pleaded innocent to fourteen first-degree murder charges and numerous counts of sodomy, robbery and mayhem. In eleven of these indictments, a felony-murder-robbery special circumstance was also alleged. Bonin was ordered to return to court on January 7 for pretrial motions and the formal setting of a trial date. On the same date (January 2), Butts was arraigned on five counts of murder, in addition to three counts of robbery. The date of Butts' formal plea was delayed by Judge Leetham until January 7.[182]

Four days after his formal plea before Judge Leetham, Butts committed suicide by hanging himself with a towel in his cell.[64] A subsequent coroner's investigation revealed Butts had unsuccessfully attempted to take his own life on at least four occasions prior to his arrest.[71] His attorney, Joe Ingber, theorized that Butts' depressive state had been magnified by the impending release of transcripts of his client's testimony at the preliminary hearing, in which Butts had graphically described the torture the victims had endured prior to their murder.[183]

At the time of Butts' suicide, he had not agreed to accept any form of plea bargain, or to testify against Bonin.[184]

Both Miley and Munro agreed to testify against Bonin at his impending trials in exchange for being spared the death penalty,[140] with Deputy District Attorney Stirling Norris also agreeing to seek the dismissal of additional charges of sodomy and robbery filed against Munro if he honored his agreement to testify.[185] In the case of Miley, Norris agreed to accept two separate pleas of guilty to first-degree murder in exchange for two concurrent sentences of life imprisonment, with a possibility of parole after 25 years, if Miley agreed to testify against Bonin at the trials.[107] William Pugh also agreed to testify, pleading guilty to one count of voluntary manslaughter and receiving six years in prison.[186]

Murder trials

Los Angeles County

Bonin was brought to trial in Los Angeles County, charged with the murder of twelve of his victims whose bodies had been found within this constituency, on October 19, 1981. He was tried before Superior Court Judge William Keene.[187] The trial commenced on November 5, 1981.[107]

Norris, acting as prosecutor, sought the death penalty for each count of murder for which Bonin was tried, stating in his opening speech to the jury: "We will prove he is the Freeway Killer, as he has bragged to a number of witnesses. We will show you that he enjoyed the killings. Not only did he enjoy it, and plan to enjoy it, he had an insatiable demand, an insatiable appetite – not only for sodomy, but for killing." Norris further elaborated that Bonin had followed a depressingly familiar routine in his murders of luring or forcing his victim into his van, before overpowering and binding his victim. He would then repeatedly rape his captive between and throughout instances of torture, before finally reaching the "climax of the orgy" by killing his victim.[188] Norris further asserted that Bonin considered murder a group sport,[76] and would typically groom people of a low mentality to participate in many of his murders.[189]

Miley and Munro testified against Bonin at his Los Angeles County trial, describing in graphic detail the murders in which they had accompanied Bonin. In his testimony, delivered on November 17, Munro stated that shortly after the murder of Wells, he and Bonin drove to a McDonald's restaurant and purchased hamburgers with $10 taken from Wells' wallet. As they had eaten the burgers at Bonin's home, Bonin laughed and mused: "Thanks, Steve, wherever you are"[54] before Munro had also joined in the laughter.[190] Miley testified to his participation in the murders of Miranda and Macabe,[191] describing in graphic detail how the two victims were beaten and tortured with various instruments before their murders, and how he had heard a "bunch of bones cracking" as Bonin had pressed a tire iron against Miranda's neck. Miley continued his testimony with the words: "The kid vomited. I jumped down on him the same way, killing the guy."[109] Several members of the audience hastily left the courtroom as Bonin's accomplices delivered their testimony, later stating to reporters gathered outside the courtroom they had found the recited details too nauseating.[192]

The strategy of Bonin's defense attorneys, Charvet and Stewart, was to challenge the credibility of numerous prosecution witnesses, and to suggest that extremely significant mitigating factors as to the root causes of Bonin's behavior lay in the extensive physical, sexual, and emotional abuse he had endured throughout his early life. To support this contention, Bonin's defense attorneys summoned Dr. David Foster, an expert on the developmental effects of violence and abuse on children, to testify as to the conclusions of the psychological examinations he had conducted on Bonin. Foster opined that Bonin had, as a result of repeated abandonment, not received the nurturing, protection, and behavioral feedback as a child necessary for sufficient psychological development. This had been so consistent and prevalent, he stated, that Bonin held a confusion as to the differences between violence and love. In a direct rebuttal, the prosecution summoned forensic psychiatrist Park Dietz, a noted expert in impulse control disorder and sexual sadism disorder, who testified that the overall pattern of Bonin's behavior was inconsistent with an inability to control his impulses. Dietz further testified as to Bonin's actions being reflective of planning as opposed to impulsive behavior. In summary, Dietz concluded that Bonin was a sexual sadist, and that although he suffered from an antisocial personality disorder, neither of these conditions had impaired his ability to control his actions.[130]

On November 24, a prison inmate named Lloyd Douglas testified that Bonin had bragged to him of his culpability in the Freeway Killer murders while both were incarcerated in the Los Angeles County Jail in the summer of 1980. According to Douglas, Bonin had held a newspaper article aloft before saying to him: "These are the little boys I got ahold of." In cross-examination, Douglas conceded he had only related these claims to authorities after pleading guilty to the filing of charges of voluntary manslaughter and second-degree burglary against him and that he had been released from custody the previous month. Douglas also testified to being the cousin of victim Lawrence Sharp.[193][n 7] It is also alleged by victims' families that Bonin had remained remorseless throughout his trial, seemingly deriving pleasure from their pain if anything.[194]

Against overruled objections from Bonin's defense attorney, a Fresno-based reporter named David López waived his previously sought immunity under California's shield law and agreed to testify on behalf of the prosecution as to the details of seven interviews Bonin had granted him between December 1980 and April 1981.[195] In his testimony, given on December 14 and 15, López stated Bonin had first informed him he would refuse to talk with any other reporter if López would agree not to broadcast the precise details of the interview. López had agreed to these conditions, and Bonin had confessed to him on January 9[188] that he was indeed the Freeway Killer and that he had killed 21 victims. The victims' ages, Bonin had confided, had ranged between 12 and 19, with his youngest victim, Macabe, being the easiest victim to kill. According to López, Bonin had confided that although he resented the prospect of being executed, he had opted to kill repeatedly simply because he had enjoyed the "sound of kids dying".[196] López also testified Bonin had informed him he had killed one victim by repeatedly punching him in the throat,[197] and that the primary incentive for his revealing the location of King's body to authorities had been the knowledge police would purchase a hamburger for Bonin as they searched San Bernardino County for the remains.[198][199] Upon cross-examination, Bonin's defense attorney ensured that López conceded that his testimony was based upon what he had recalled from the interviews as opposed to any handwritten notes, although he strenuously denied he had received any form of payment to testify.[197]

Closing arguments lasted from December 16 to 22, 1981. In his closing argument on behalf of the prosecution, Norris described Bonin as an insatiable, callous individual who acted with malice aforethought, and who derived extreme pleasure from the suffering he inflicted upon his victims. Having outlined the torture Bonin's victims had endured, Norris concluded his closing arguments by urging the jury to "give him [Bonin] what he has earned".[200]

Defense attorney Charvet began his closing argument on December 21. Although Charvet did not specifically ask the jurors to find Bonin not guilty,[201] he did request they only return the "reasonable verdict you can bring", indicating a likelihood of not guilty verdicts on at least some counts upon which Bonin stood charged. Charvet then hearkened towards the credibility of some of the delivered testimony, pouring particular scorn upon Miley and Munro, whom he emphasized had turned state's evidence, and thus, he alleged, had tailored their testimony to the desires of the police. As such, Charvet called their testimony unbelievable.[202]

Charvet repeatedly reminded the jury he had exposed myriad inconsistencies in the testimony of Munro's account of the murder of Wells in the various statements he had given, and had compelled him to admit that he lied on numerous occasions. He also reminded the jury of the extensive abuse Bonin had endured as a child, and of the diagnoses doctors at the Atascadero hospital had reached between 1969 and 1971. Contending the prosecution's case was "full of holes", he then alleged the prosecution had resorted to what amounted to little more than "revulsion tactics" in the hope Bonin would be convicted upon that basis.[203]

Following these closing arguments, Judge Keene ordered the trial recessed until December 28, when he delivered his final instructions to the jury, who then formally began their deliberations.[201]

Conviction

Bonin's first trial lasted until January 6, 1982. On this date, the jury convicted Bonin of ten of the murders for which he was tried,[204] although he was found not guilty of the murders of Lundgren and King, of committing sodomy upon Grabs, of committing mayhem upon Lundgren,[205] and of robbing one other victim. As these verdicts were read by the clerk of court, many relatives and friends of Bonin's victims wept openly. The following day, the prosecution and defense made alternate pleas for the actual sentence the jury should decide, with Norris requesting the death penalty and Charvet requesting life imprisonment.[206] On January 20, the jury further found that the special circumstances required within California state law (multiple murders and robbery) had been met in the ten murder cases for which they had found Bonin guilty, and thus unanimously recommended he receive the death penalty.[188]

Bonin was cleared of the sodomy and murder of King because he had led police to the body of the victim in December 1980, with the agreement that his leading police to the body could not be used against him in court, and therefore the prosecutors had discussed King's disappearance at the trial, but not the discovery of his body;[207] he was cleared of the charges of mayhem and murder against Lundgren because, according to López, he had strenuously denied committing this particular killing in the interviews he had granted to him.[208]

He had a total disregard for the sanctity of human life and a civilized society. Sadistic, unbelievably cruel, senseless and deliberately premeditated. Guilty beyond any possible or imaginary doubt.
- Los Angeles Superior Court Judge William Keene pronouncing the death sentence upon Bonin. March 12, 1982.[209]

In response to the recommendations of the jury, Judge Keene ordered a reconvening of court on February 24, upon which date Charvet was to argue for a modification of the sentence recommended by the jury.[205] Despite an impassioned appeal by Charvet, on March 12, Keene formally sentenced Bonin to death for the ten murders for which he had been convicted. Describing the murders as "a gross, revolting affront to human dignity", Keene further ordered at this hearing that if Bonin's death sentence were commuted to one of life imprisonment, the sentences should run consecutively.[210] Bonin was then ordered to be remanded to the warden of San Quentin State Prison, to await execution in the gas chamber. He remained unmoved upon receipt of this sentence, having earlier informed his attorney he fully expected to formally receive the death penalty.[211]

Prior to his scheduled second trial in Orange County, Bonin was temporarily removed from death row and held in solitary confinement, where he remained until the conclusion of this trial.[212] While incarcerated in this capacity, Charvet attempted to secure a change of venue, citing the extensive pretrial publicity surrounding the case in the county minimizing the chances of securing an untainted jury within the jurisdiction; however, this motion was refused by Judge Kenneth Lae, who ruled in November 1982 that there had only been minimal publicity surrounding the Freeway Killer case in Orange County following Bonin's earlier convictions.[213]

Orange County

Bonin was brought to trial in neighboring Orange County, charged with the robbery and murder of four further victims who had been found murdered within this jurisdiction between November 1979 and May 1980, on March 21, 1983.[212] He was tried before Superior Court Judge Kenneth Lae.[214]

Initial jury selection began on this date, and saw a total of 204 prospective jurors subjected to the process of voir dire selection until sixteen were picked in June. Upon completion of the jury selection process, Bonin's attorney renewed an earlier filed motion that the trial should be moved to a jurisdiction outside of Orange County due to pretrial publicity tainting the jury pool; this renewed motion was again rejected by Lae, who ruled that the trial would begin on June 14.[50]

The prosecutor at Bonin's Orange County trial, Bryan Brown, contended that all four victims killed within this constituency had been abducted while hitchhiking, then ordered to strip before being bound about the wrists and ankles. Each of the four victims had then endured rape, beatings, torture, and finally ligature strangulation. In each instance, the ligature had left an impression measuring approximately one-half of an inch upon the victim's neck. Brown also hearkened toward the similarities in each of these murders and two of those for which Bonin had earlier been convicted in Los Angeles County: Miranda and Wells.[50] Particular emphasis was placed upon the fiber evidence found upon each of the Orange County victims—in addition to three victims killed in Los Angeles County—being a precise match to the distinctive carpeting in the rear of Bonin's van.[215] As such, Brown stated, the four Orange County victims had been killed by the same individual who had killed Miranda and Wells, and his accomplices in these two murders, Miley and Munro, would testify as to their accompanying Bonin on each of these murders.[54] To further support this contention, the prosecution also presented forensic experts who testified that the fibers discovered upon the bodies of all six victims in question were a precise match with the carpeting in Bonin's van. The interior of the van had also been extensively stained with human blood. In reference to the evidence found within the van itself, Brown stated to the jury: "One can truly say from the evidence found within the van it is a virtual death wagon."[216]

These contentions were refuted by Charvet, who contended that any similarities in modus operandi did not constitute automatic proof of his client's guilt, and that the evidence presented did not support the prosecution's contention beyond a reasonable doubt that Bonin had murdered any of the four Orange County victims, or the two victims killed in Los Angeles County. Specifically, Charvet attacked the credibility of Munro, and further contended Bonin was simply a scapegoat for four unsolved murders.[212] Charvet also argued before the jury that Brown had "spent more time discussing the two Los Angeles cases" for which Bonin had previously been convicted than actually proving Bonin had committed any of the Orange County murders.[217]

During the six-week trial, Bonin's attorneys called two witnesses in his defense—one of whom was Munro, who conceded Bonin had communicated with him prior to his testifying in this second trial, requesting he lie when called to deliver his testimony.[218]

Second conviction

Following closing arguments from both counsels on August 1, the jury retired to consider their verdicts; they deliberated for less than three hours before announcing on August 2 that they had found Bonin guilty of each of the four murders, in addition to three counts of robbery.[217] After three days of deliberations as to the actual penalty to be imposed upon Bonin, the jury announced on August 22 their recommendations that he be sentenced to death on each count. Judge Lae postponed formal sentencing until August 26.[219] On this date, Bonin received four further death sentences, with Lae describing Bonin as sadistic and guilty of "monstrous criminal conduct".[136]

Death row

Bonin was transferred in March 1982 on a Beechcraft Model 34 aircraft from the Orange County jail to San Quentin State Prison, awaiting execution in the gas chamber.[220] In his years on death row, he undertook painting and writing as hobbies, and received several minor awards for his artwork, short stories and poems. He also became acquainted with convicted murderers Lawrence Bittaker, Randy Kraft, and Douglas Clark, and Jimmy Lee Smith.[220][221] Almost immediately after his arrival, he was placed in the same row as Bittaker, who was previously incarcerated with Bonin at Los Angeles County Jail,[222] and subsequently helped Bonin obtain earphones for a television set in his cell.[220]

Bonin also corresponded with numerous individuals, including the mothers of some of his victims,[198] although he never expressed any regret or remorse over having murdered their sons. On one occasion, Bonin informed victim Sean King's mother Lavada Gifford–whom he had written back a total of 13 times–that her son had been his favorite victim as "he was such a screamer". She wrote to him curious of his apparent conversion to Christianity in 1989, and to ask him various questions about her son.[198][223] Evidently, Bonin would purposefully withhold information that victims' mothers would seek from him, seemingly deriving pleasure from their discontent.[194] He also contended to his defense attorneys—in addition to several people with whom he corresponded—that Butts had been the actual ringleader behind the murders, and that he had simply been Butts' accomplice.[189][n 8] These claims would be refuted by Norris, the prosecutor at Bonin's Los Angeles County murder trial, who recollected shortly before Bonin's execution: "He was the leader, and he chose weak people he could use."[189]

The method of Bonin's execution was superseded by lethal injection by the state of California in 1992, following the execution of Robert Alton Harris (the first inmate California had executed since 1967).[224] Harris had exhibited evident symptoms of discomfort for up to four minutes throughout his fifteen-minute execution in the gas chamber. These symptoms had included convulsions.[225] As such, the state of California opted to use lethal injection as an alternate method of execution to the gas chamber, branding the gas chamber a "cruel and unusual" method of execution.[226]

Appeals

Bonin filed numerous appeals against his convictions and sentencing, citing issues such as jury prejudice, the potential of jury inflammation via listening to numerous victim impact statements (to which his defense counsel had offered to stipulate), and inadequate defense as the bases for each appeal. For these appeals, Bonin hired new lawyers, who initially submitted contentions that his previous defense attorney, Charvet, had provided inadequate defense at his trials by failing to place sufficient emphasis upon Bonin's bipolar disorder and the sexual abuse he had endured as a child. These lawyers contended that had Charvet placed further emphasis on these issues, Bonin would have been "humanized" in the eyes of his juries. Each successive appeal proved unsuccessful,[226] with the U.S. Supreme Court refusing to overturn Bonin's death penalty convictions in August 1988 and January 1989.

Despite upholding Bonin's convictions, the Supreme Court poured scorn upon Judge Keene for failing to fully heed a warning given by the prosecution prior to the Los Angeles County trial that Munro had discussed the possibility of agreeing to legal representation by Charvet prior to his testimony. Despite admonishing Charvet for a potential conflict of interest, Judge Keene had permitted him to act as Bonin's defense attorney at his first trial. In spite of this fact, the Supreme Court ruled in 1989 that Charvet had effectively cross-examined Munro at trial, and that Keene's actions, though ruled as "inexplicable", had not effectively harmed Bonin's legal defense.[227] Further merit was given to Bonin's contention that his defense should have been allowed to stipulate to the testimony of the parents of his victims, rather than their being allowed to identify photographs of their sons in both life and death at his trials. Despite this ruling, this finding was also deemed not to have affected the overall verdict.[107]

A final submission to the United States Court of Appeals was submitted in October 1994, with Bonin contending such issues as his being denied the effective assistance of counsel at his trials, that he had been denied due process at his Los Angeles trial due to the judge's refusal to suppress the testimony of Munro and Miley,[130] and that the judge at his Orange County trial had denied his counsel's motion for a change of venue upon the basis that pretrial publicity had effectively minimized any chance of obtaining an unbiased jury within the county. This final appeal was rejected on June 28, 1995, with the appellate judges stating they had found no evidence of legal misconduct, and that no evidence existed that the 13 jurors who served upon Bonin's Orange County trial who had admitted to minimal, indirect pretrial exposure to the Freeway Killer case had, as a result of this pretrial publicity, been incapable of judging Bonin with impartiality. As such, the appellate judges declared their satisfaction with the validity of Bonin's convictions.[190]

On February 20, 1996, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rejected a plea for clemency submitted by Bonin's attorneys on the grounds of inadequate legal representation at both his trials.[228] Scarcely one hour prior to his scheduled execution, the Supreme Court refused to hear Bonin's final plea to overturn his death sentence, with the convened panel in almost unanimous agreement that Bonin's own attorneys had not failed to give their client adequate legal representation by not earlier discovering their submitted claims to have discovered evidence attesting to Bonin's innocence. Furthermore, these appellate judges ruled that Bonin's attorneys should not have waited until the last minute to submit arguments to overturn or postpone the impending death sentence of their client. These convened judges also rejected Bonin's final claim that he had a right to choose between the gas chamber or lethal injection as his actual method of execution.[224]

Execution

The lethal injection room at San Quentin State Prison, 2010

Bonin was executed by lethal injection inside the gas chamber at San Quentin State Prison on February 23, 1996. He was the first person to be executed by lethal injection in the history of California, and his execution occurred fourteen years after his first death sentence had been imposed.[229]

In a final interview given to a local radio station less than 24 hours before he was executed, Bonin claimed he had "made peace" with the fact he was about to die, adding that his only major regret in life was that he had not pursued his teenage passion of bowling long enough to have turned professional.[27] He expressed his disagreement with the State's decision to execute him, stating: "A lot of people believe I should die for what I [have done]. I don't agree." Bonin also denied any responsibility for his actions, claiming his urge to kill was too strong to resist before expressing his hope the Lord "will understand me, and know that I couldn't help what I did."[230]

When asked whether there was anything he had to say to the families of his victims, Bonin stated: "They feel my death will bring closure, but that's not the case. They're going to find out."[231]

At 6 p.m. on the day he was executed, Bonin was moved from his cell to a death watch cell, where he ordered his last meal: two large pizzas, three pints of ice cream and three six-packs of Coke, which he ate while watching an episode of Jeopardy!.[232] His final hours were spent in the company of five individuals whom he had chosen for this occasion. These included his attorney, chaplain, and a prospective biographer. Each later stated that Bonin seemed resigned to his fate; his attorney also added that he had not detected any remorse in his client.[233] At 11:45 p.m., Bonin was escorted from his holding cell into the execution chamber.[234] In his final statement, given to the prison warden one hour prior to his scheduled execution at midnight, Bonin again expressed no remorse for his crimes and left a note that stated:

I feel the death penalty is not an answer to the problems at hand. I feel it sends the wrong message to the people of this country. Young people act as they see other people acting instead of as people tell them to act. I would advise that when a person has a thought of doing anything serious against the law, that before they did, they should go to a quiet place and think about it seriously.

Bonin was pronounced dead at 12:13 a.m.[234] He was 49 at the time of his execution. None of Bonin's relatives chose to witness his execution, although the event was witnessed by several relatives of his victims, many of whom wept and embraced when his death was officially confirmed.[235] According to several of these witnesses, Bonin's execution passed without complications, and he was heavily sedated throughout the latter stages of the procedure.[22] On this subject, then-Governor Pete Wilson, who had rejected a submitted plea for clemency from Bonin's attorneys three days prior to the execution,[228] referred to Bonin as the "poster boy for capital punishment" before adding that California's method of execution ensured his death was infinitely more pleasant than that endured by his victims.[71]

Freeway Killer victims
1. Thomas Glen Lundgren (13): May 28, 1979
2. Mark Duane Shelton (17): August 4, 1979
3. Markus Alexander Grabs (17): August 5, 1979
4. Donald Ray Hyden (15): August 27, 1979
5. David Louis Murillo (17): September 9, 1979
6. Robert Christopher Wirostek (18): September 17, 1979
7. John Doe (19–25): c. November 1, 1979
8. Frank Dennis Fox (17): November 30, 1979
9. John Frederick Kilpatrick (15): December 10, 1979
10. Michael Francis McDonald (16): January 1, 1980
11. Charles Dempster Miranda (15): February 3, 1980
12. James Michael Macabe (12): February 3, 1980
13. Ronald Craig Gatlin (18): March 14, 1980
14. Glenn Norman Barker (14): March 21, 1980
15. Russell Duane Rugh (15): March 21, 1980
16. Harry Todd Turner (15): March 24, 1980
17. Steven John Wood (16): April 10, 1980
18. Darin Lee Kendrick (19): April 29, 1980
19. Lawrence Eugene Sharp (17): May 12, 1980
20. Sean Paige King (14): May 19, 1980
21. Steven Jay Wells (18): June 2, 1980

Victims

Bonin and three of his four known accomplices were convicted of fourteen murders committed between August 5, 1979, and June 2, 1980; Bonin was also charged with two additional murders for which he was acquitted at his first trial in Los Angeles County. Of these murders for which Bonin was convicted, ten were committed in Los Angeles County and four in nearby Orange County. Bonin was suspected of committing at least 21 murders, and the killings for which he was convicted are shown in italics in the adjacent table.

  • In nine murders; those of Lundgren, Shelton, Grabs, Hyden, Murillo, Wirostek, Kendrick, Wells and the John Doe whose skeletal remains had been found in Kern County on November 30, 1979,[94] Bonin was assisted by his primary accomplice, Vernon Butts, a factory worker who had been 21 years old when he committed his first murder with Bonin. According to Bonin, Butts had been an extremely active accomplice.[236][237]
  • Bonin was assisted by 19-year-old Gregory Miley in the February 3 murders of Miranda and Macabe. Miley then returned to his native Houston in the spring of 1980 to live with his stepfather. He was arrested on August 22.[64]
  • James Munro, Bonin's lodger and coworker, assisted Bonin in the murder of Steven Wells. The day after Bonin's arrest, Munro fled to his native Michigan, where he was arrested on July 31.[169]
  • Through questioning Bonin's neighbor, Everett Fraser, police discovered that 17-year-old William Pugh,[238] who had informed police he suspected Bonin of being the Freeway Killer, actually knew Bonin much better than he had initially divulged. Police later learned Pugh a—juvenile delinquent with a lengthy criminal record[117]—had willingly accompanied Bonin in the murder of Harry Todd Turner. As a direct result of this knowledge, first-degree murder charges against a 20-year-old acquaintance of Bonin's named Eric Marten Wijnaendts—brought in December 1980—were dropped in January 1981,[239] with the county prosecutor citing insufficient evidence as the cause.[240][n 9]
  • Bonin was not brought to trial for the murders of Mark Shelton, Robert Wirostek,[177] John Kilpatrick, Michael McDonald, or the John Doe whose body was found in November 1979[98] because police did not find sufficient evidence upon any of the victims' bodies which could conclusively link Bonin alone to the crimes. Police did charge Bonin and Butts with the murder of the John Doe,[242] and those of Mark Shelton and Robert Wirostek (alongside that of Darin Kendrick) in October and November 1980. Bonin was formally charged with these murders at a pretrial hearing held on January 2, 1981.[243]
  • Shelton had been linked to the manhunt for the Freeway Killer upon the discovery of his body in August 1979,[244] as had Darin Kendrick and the unidentified victim whose location was reported to police by Butts. Wirostek, who vanished en route to his job on September 17, 1979, was not confirmed as a Freeway Killer victim until his body was formally identified in July 1980.
  • Two months after all charges had been filed against each defendant, Butts committed suicide, rendering his recorded testimony in these three cases inadmissible as evidence. The charges against Bonin in relation to Shelton, Wirostek and the John Doe were therefore dropped in accordance with Penal Code section 995 in early 1981. Nonetheless, sufficient physical evidence was still present in the case of Darin Kendrick—a murder for which Bonin was subsequently convicted.
  • Neither Bonin nor any of his accomplices were ever charged with the murders of John Kilpatrick or Michael McDonald, although Bonin confessed to their killings to David López.[196]
  • Bonin was charged with, but subsequently cleared of, the murders of Sean King and Thomas Lundgren at his Los Angeles County trial. He is known to have confessed to the murder of King, and did lead police to the teenager's body; he emphatically denied Lundgren's murder in the series of interviews granted to David López between December 1980 and January 1981, although Bonin stated in these interviews he had killed 21 victims.[245]

Other "Freeway Killers"

On July 1, 1977, Patrick Kearney, the prime suspect in a series of killings of young men known as the "Trash Bag Murders", voluntarily surrendered to Riverside police.[246] Prior to his surrender, Kearney had been a fugitive for two months, following his being forensically linked to the murder of a 17-year-old named John LaMay—a confirmed victim of the Trash Bag Murderer.[247] Kearney subsequently confessed to the murders of 28 boys and young men; many of whose bodies he had discarded alongside freeways in southern California. He was sentenced to twenty-one terms of life imprisonment.[248]

In contrast to Bonin, Kearney extensively dismembered the majority of his victims' bodies before typically discarding their remains in trash bags.[249] Although primarily known as the "Trash Bag Murderer",[250] Kearney is also known as the Freeway Killer.[251]

Three years after the arrest of Bonin, two California Highway Patrol officers arrested 38-year-old Randy Kraft as he attempted to discard the body of a 25-year-old Marine from his car in Mission Viejo.[252] The victim had been drugged, bound and garroted in a similar manner to that of numerous other young men whose bodies had been found alongside or close to various California and Oregon freeways since 1972. A search of Kraft's vehicle revealed an envelope containing over fifty Polaroid pictures of young men—either drugged or deceased—in suggestive poses. Several of these images depicted confirmed victims of Kraft. Police also discovered a coded list depicting cryptic references to his victims in the trunk of Kraft's vehicle, leading Kraft to also become known as the "Scorecard Killer."[253]

Although Kraft's disposal method had been similar to that of Bonin, Kraft drugged his victims before he killed them and used differing torture methods upon their bodies, including burning the victims' chests and genitals with an automobile cigarette lighter.[254] In addition, many of his victims had been aged in their early- or mid-twenties, and a small number of his victims had also been dismembered prior to their disposal.[255]

Collectively, Bonin, Kraft and Kearney may have claimed up to 131 victims.[256]

Aftermath

Bonin's family refused to claim his remains in the weeks following his 1996 execution. His remains were cremated in a private ceremony with none of his family members present. Bonin's ashes were later scattered over the Pacific Ocean.[257]

Three weeks after Bonin's execution, authorities discovered that his mother had openly exploited an administrative error pertaining to her son's social security disability payments—which Bonin had begun receiving for a mental disability in 1972 and which should have terminated upon his 1982 imprisonment—to maintain payments on her Downey home. This administrative error—totaling approximately $79,000—was only discovered after a funeral director notified the Social Security Administration of Bonin's death.[226]

Bonin's father died of cirrhosis of the liver on October 11, 1980, at the age of 61, four months after his son's arrest. His condition sourced from his excessive alcohol addiction.[258][11]

Throughout Bonin's trials and in the years of his subsequent incarceration on death row, experts devoted much speculation and debate as to whether the root cause of his crimes lay in his extremely abusive and dysfunctional upbringing. Opponents and advocates of the death penalty alike were in agreement Bonin had endured extensive physical, emotional and sexual abuse throughout his childhood, but much scorn was given to the claims from his attorneys and supporters that his murders had been a direct manifestation of the abuse he had endured, and an attempt to purge his frustration and anger onto his victims. In one article published in the San Francisco Chronicle three days prior to Bonin's execution, editor Robert Morse opined:

Bonin was abused as a child. The abuse seems to have been bad, but not nearly as gruesome as the abuse he dealt out. [This] world is filled with articulate people who can write and paint and were abused as children; very few of them become serial killers. The crime rate among the mentally ill is lower than among so-called 'normal' people. To call Bonin's evil a psychiatric disorder, as the defense has, or an illness, is to slander the mentally ill.[259]

Butts, who was accused of accompanying or otherwise assisting Bonin on at least nine of the murders, hanged himself while awaiting trial on January 11, 1981. He left no suicide note. At the time of his death, he had been scheduled to be tried on July 27 for six of the murders he had accompanied Bonin upon.[64] Correspondence found within his cell indicated Butts had been greatly distressed at the impending release of a transcript of evidence he had given behind closed doors at his preliminary hearing days prior, and the effect it would have on his friends and relatives.[71] Despite claiming in his formal confession to investigators shortly after his arrest that he had basically participated in the murders out of fear of Bonin, Butts also informed investigators he had considered the killing spree "a good little nightmare", adding that Bonin "really loved those sounds of screams. He loved to hear them scream ... he loved every minute of it."[260]

McVicker, the youth who had survived a 1975 assault and partial strangulation at Bonin's hands[46] and who personally witnessed Bonin's execution, was traumatized by his ordeal for several years. He was haunted by nightmares on a nightly basis concerning the incident,[194] dropped out of high school and became dependent on drugs and alcohol. Nonetheless, he described the experience of observing the execution as being symbolic of closure and "the beginning of my life."[261][262] In the years following Bonin's execution, McVicker has actively campaigned to ensure that his accomplices, Miley and Munro, remain incarcerated. In one interview granted in 2011, McVicker stated the primary reason he had been inspired to campaign against their release were the words one of the victims' mothers had spoken to him after he had testified at Bonin's first trial: "You've got to speak for my kid."[263]

Munro was sentenced to a term of fifteen years to life for the second degree murder of Steven Wells on April 6, 1981. He has repeatedly appealed his sentence, claiming that he had not known Bonin had been the Freeway Killer until after Wells' murder, and that he had been tricked into accepting a plea bargain whereby he pleaded guilty to this second degree murder charge.[226] He has also written to successive governors, requesting he be executed rather than spend the remainder of his life behind bars for what he claims is "a crime I didn't commit".[264] (In the days immediately following the murder of Wells and prior to Bonin's arrest, Munro boasted to several colleagues of his belief the Freeway Killer would never be caught.)[265] Munro has repeatedly been denied parole and is incarcerated at Mule Creek State Prison. He is next available for parole in 2029.[266]

Miley was sentenced to a term of 25 years to life for the first-degree murder of Charles Miranda by Superior Court Judge Bonnie Lee Smith on February 5, 1982.[267] On this date, Miley was informed he would need to serve a minimum of sixteen years and eight months before he would be considered for parole.[268] He was later sentenced to a concurrent term of 25 years to life by an Orange County court judge for the abduction and murder of James Macabe.[269] Initially incarcerated at the California Substance Abuse Treatment Facility and State Prison, Corcoran in Corcoran, California, Miley was later transferred to Mule Creek State Prison.[270] Throughout the years of his incarceration, Miley was repeatedly reprimanded for violating prison rules. These accrued reprimands had included the possession of contraband drugs, and attempting to engage in non-consensual sodomy with fellow inmates.

On May 25, 2016, Miley died of injuries he had sustained two days previously, when he had been attacked by another inmate in an exercise yard at Mule Creek State Prison.[271] Initially, he was evaluated at the prison medical facility before returning to his cell; he was later airlifted to hospital after falling into unconsciousness two hours after the attack.[272] At the time of Miley's death, his next scheduled parole hearing was to be held in 2019. He had most recently been eligible for parole in October 2014, after previously agreeing to a three-year continuance of his most recent request for parole.[273] This subsequent suitability hearing was held on October 29, 2014; the decision made at this hearing was to deny parole.[274]

Pugh was sentenced to six years in prison for the voluntary manslaughter of Harry Turner on May 17, 1982.[120] Pugh had initially been charged with the first-degree murder of Turner, in addition to companion charges of robbery and sodomy; however, after five days of deliberation, the jury found Pugh guilty of the reduced charge of manslaughter, and innocent of robbery and sodomy.[275] He served less than four years of his sentence, and was released from prison in late 1985.[251]

Media

Film

  • The film Freeway Killer was released by Image Entertainment in 2010. This film is directly based upon the murders committed by Bonin and his accomplices. The film cast Scott Anthony Leet as William Bonin and Dusty Sorg as Vernon Butts.

Bibliography

  • Bonin, William (1991). Doing Time: Stories from the Mind of a Death Row Prisoner. Red Bluff, Calif.: Eagle Publishing. ISBN 978-1-879027-04-6. OCLC 84045749.
  • McDougal, Dennis (1991). Angel of Darkness: The True Story of Randy Kraft and the Most Heinous Murder Spree of the Century. New York: Warner Books. ISBN 978-0-708-85342-9.
  • Rosewood, Jack (2015). William Bonin: The True Story of the Freeway Killer. CreateSpace. ISBN 978-1-5196-3119-0.

Television

  • The Investigation Discovery channel has broadcast a documentary pertaining to Bonin. This 45-minute episode—entitled The Freeway Killer—was first broadcast in May 2014.[276]
  • The documentary series World's Most Evil Killers has featured an episode focusing upon the Freeway Killer murders. This episode was first broadcast in January 2021.[277]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Contemporary records from this juvenile detention center indicate Bonin also functioned well under the disciplinary structure of the detention home.[10]
  2. ^ Questioned by police following this arrest, Bonin claimed to be glad of his apprehension, adding he may have murdered the youth and that he felt he was in need of professional help.[43]
  3. ^ According to accomplice James Munro, Bonin would engage in acts of necrophilia with several of his victims' bodies.[70]
  4. ^ Bonin would later allege he had been intimately involved with Sharp.[43]
  5. ^ David McVicker had also contacted authorities by this time to report his suspicions Bonin may be the Freeway Killer.[145] His suspicions were not dismissed, but regarded as one of numerous public tips to be investigated.[146]
  6. ^ Bonin's parents and older brother were absent from the household at the time.[149]
  7. ^ Douglas also conceded in his cross-examination that he had previously agreed to testify against serial killer Lawrence Bittaker pertaining to alleged jailhouse confessions Bittaker had given to him.[193]
  8. ^ On one occasion, Bonin claimed Butts had suggested to him the two should embark on a spree of murder and that Butts would incorporate aspects of these murders into his Dungeons and Dragons role-playing game with another man.[29]
  9. ^ Wijnaendts was a Dutch-born youth who had encountered Bonin while the two were incarcerated at Orange County jail in early March 1980 (where Wijnaendts had been incarcerated upon charges of public intoxication and battery). Bonin had informed police Pugh had been his accomplice in the murder of Turner, and not Wijnaendts, upon learning of Wijnaendts's arrest.[241]

References

  1. ^ "Freeway Killer: Bonin Convicted for 10 Killings; Awaits Sentencing". The Daily Record. Ellensburg, Washington. United Press International. January 7, 1982. p. 8. Retrieved March 15, 2014.
  2. ^ McDougal 1991, pp. 161–162
  3. ^ a b Gregory, Kim (January 17, 2010). "The Beat Goes On: Decades Have Passed, but Housewife and Mom Jane Howatt Remains Determined to Piece". Ventura County Star. Retrieved August 14, 2021.
  4. ^ "California Murderer Gets Death Sentence". The New York Times. Associated Press. March 13, 1982. Retrieved November 4, 2009.
  5. ^ "Capital Punishment in California". January 1, 2002. Retrieved March 20, 2021 – via albanyca.org.
  6. ^ a b "People v. Bonin (1988)". law.justia.com. August 29, 1988. Retrieved January 23, 2022.
  7. ^ "Freeway Killer's Story: Ghastly Tale of Horror". The Gadsden Times. February 3, 1981. Retrieved November 27, 2018.
  8. ^ "California's 'Freeway Killer' Executed". CNN. February 23, 1996. Retrieved November 27, 2018.
  9. ^ a b c d McDougal 1991, p. 161
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "William George Bonin, Petitioner-appellant, v. Arthur Calderon, As Warden of San Quentin State Prison; James Rowland, Director of the California Department of Corrections. (9th Cir. 1995)". law.justia.com. June 28, 1995. Retrieved April 9, 2011.
  11. ^ a b c d e McDougal 1991, p. 161
  12. ^ a b "Defense Still Fighting as 'Freeway Killer' Awaits Death". The Tuscaloosa News. February 19, 1996. Retrieved January 24, 2022.
  13. ^ a b c d "Boys' Killer Led a Twisted, Tortured Life". The San Francisco Chronicle. February 12, 1996. Retrieved November 27, 2018.
  14. ^ a b Pelto 2007, pp. 122
  15. ^ O'Kane 2017, p. 178
  16. ^ a b c d "Execution Set for 'Freeway Fiend'". Reading Eagle. February 19, 1996. Retrieved March 15, 2014.
  17. ^ a b Rosewood 2015, p. 5
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i "World's Most Evil Killers: Season 5 Episode 2". peacocktv.com. September 1, 2021. Retrieved September 24, 2021.
  19. ^ a b c d e f "Clues From a Condemned Man's Past". Los Angeles Times. February 18, 1996. Retrieved November 27, 2018.
  20. ^ "California Executes 14 Boys' Murderer". The Hour. February 23, 1996. Retrieved November 26, 2018.
  21. ^ McDougal 1991, pp. 161–162
  22. ^ a b Bovsun, Mara (March 25, 2008). "Murder Down The Freeway". Daily News. New York. Retrieved January 25, 2022.
  23. ^ a b c d e f McDougal 1991, p. 162
  24. ^ a b "'Freeway Killer' William Bonin is Executed: Sadistic Slayer Confessed to 21 Murders". Los Angeles Times. February 23, 1996. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
  25. ^ Rosewood 2015, p. 7
  26. ^ Pelto 2007, p. 142
  27. ^ a b McDougal, Dennis (April 5, 2000). "Life After Death Penalty". littoral.net. Archived from the original on April 30, 2001. Retrieved February 18, 2011.
  28. ^ Pelto 2007, p. 231
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Cited works and further reading

Preceded by
David Edwin Mason
Executions conducted and scheduled in California Succeeded by
Keith Daniel Williams

Template:Unidentified decedent