Linda Anne Healy, a stunningly flawless young woman, was a senior at Washington State University approaching her graduation with a degree in Psychology.1 The selfless and youthful Linda spent time working with mentally-handicapped children in her spare time. On January 31, 1974, in Seattle Washington, Linda awoke at 5:30 to begin her day. Her lively and bustling day was filled with classes and activities, just as one would expect for a 21 year old scholar. She wrote a letter to a friend outlining her intentions to cook dinner for her family that very evening. But Linda Anne Healy never made it to the dinner. Reported missing, the investigation would come to find her covers drenched in blood and her bloodstained nightgown shoved into her closet.2
Later, on a cold night in Salt Lake City, on November 18, 1974, Carol DaRonch was leaving a shopping mall when she was approached by a young slender man. He proceeded to introduce himself as officer Roslyn and explained that there had been an attempt to break into DaRonch’s car.3 As he asked her to get into the car to file a police report, she immediately realized “he wasn’t who he said he was and that something really bad was going to happen,” as she later described it. He then handcuffed her and attempted to confine her. Luckily, DaRonch was able to escape this man as she saw a car approaching theirs. She was a survivor who was able to give a profile of the kidnapper.4
With DaRonch’s help, the police had solid information, but no leads came of it. Years would pass, and more murders of young women occurred in Utah.5 As the investigators in Utah frantically searched for the suspect, they started to come across some chilling observations. They discovered that there were strange similarities with the Washington state murders and their murders; the missing women had similar profiles. Also, the disappearances all took place at night. The sightings of the suspect all described a man wearing a cast or sling and driving a brownish tan Volkswagen.6 To top it off, five witnesses described the suspect as an attractive young man. With the help of the witnesses, a composite sketch of the suspect was made.
Then, a young man was stopped on a driving violation. The only reason that the violation aroused greater suspicion for the police was that he attempted to flee by running stop signs and turning his car lights off. His suspicious tools blatantly dispersed all throughout his car was the cause for suspicion of his connection to the murders.7 Some of these items consisted of a crow bar, pantyhose, and handcuffs. With the passenger seat missing, he was arrested for suspicion of attempted burglary. The handcuffs were compared to the ones DaRonch had described. As it turned out, they were the same pair. When the man was picked out of a lineup by DaRonch, it was confirmed that he was the suspect who had attempted the kidnapping of DaRonch. The police also felt that this man, Ted Bundy, might be responsible for the connected murders in Utah and Washington, and also others in Colorado.8
Bundy was convicted and sentenced to fifteen years in prison. During this time, police were investigating his connection to the missing women in Colorado. He had made credit card transactions near the locations where the women had gone missing. It was not too long before Bundy was extradited to Colorado for the murder of Caryn Campbell, a 23 year old nurse who had gone missing one night as she was looking to get a magazine from her room at the Wildwood Inn at Snowmass, Colorado.9 Somewhere between the hallway and elevator she had disappeared. Her body was found beaten on the side of the road in Snowmass. Awaiting his trial for that murder, Ted Bundy managed to escape prison by climbing into the ceiling light fixture. He then made his way to Tallahassee, Florida, where he rented an apartment near Florida State University under the name of Chris Hagen.10
On Saturday, January 14, 1978, Bundy broke into Florida State ‘s Chi Omega sorority house.11 He strangled two women to death, raping and ruthlessly beating their bodies. Two other women were also beaten and hit over the head with a log. These girls managed to survive to tell their story, thanks to their roommate Nita Neary, who managed to arrive just before Bundy could murder the two beaten victims. The only evidence found to prosecute Bundy was in fact a mask that was found at the site of another woman attacked that very same night. This mask was identical to one found in Bundy’s car.12 He didn’t know that he had left behind unique bite marks on his victims at the sorority house, and that these bite marks were particular to his teeth and his teeth only. Yet again, none of this would bring Ted Bundy to trial.
It wasn’t until February 9, 1978, that Bundy would have his last kill.13 Twelve year old Kimberly Leach had just been elected a runner up for valentine queen at her junior high in Lake City, Florida. Just before heading to her PE class, she remembered she had left her purse in her homeroom class. Upon being excused to run off to retrieve it, her friend was shocked to see little Kimberly running off with an angry man. Lieutenant Andy Anderson, an EMT with Lake City Fire Department, was on duty and heading home to shower and change clothes.14 Heading toward home, as he passed the Junior High, his eye caught the attention of something unusual. A white van had been stopped in the middle of the lane blocking traffic. A man was then leading a young girl from campus toward the van. In the eyes of those unaware of what was happening, she seemed to be taking off with what appeared to be an angry father. When the school called her home to ask why Kimberly had not gone to her other classes that day, her parents knew something was wrong. After not returning home, the authorities were contacted. Eight weeks later, after endless searches, her body was found in a pigpen. She had been sexually assaulted and strangled. Yet again, another similar act that tied all the murders together and pointed toward Ted Bundy.
The murder of Kim Leach and the Chi Omega investigation became linked on February 17.15 The captivating evidence was that Bundy had stayed in the Lake City Motel the very night prior to Kim’s disappearance. During this time, on February 21, an article came out with the attempted abduction of Leslie Parmenter. Fourteen years old at the time, Parmenter caught the eye of a man in a white dodge van on February 8, 1978. He struck up a conversation with her, just as Parmenter’s older brother was approaching. Angrily approaching the van, the suspect fled. The composite was an exact match to Ted Bundy. Suddenly all evidence pointed to Ted Bundy.
He wasn’t caught in one fell swoop. Rather, it took time for investigators to link the individual murders with similar characteristics in the crime scenes, as well as the sightings of him and composite sketches. This all finally led to the capturing of Ted Bundy. On June 25, 1979, Bundy went on trial in Florida for the murders of the sorority women.16 The key witness to bring him to justice was Nita Neary, who had seen him fleeing the house after the murders. In addition, the bite marks on the victims’ bodies were compared and found to be an exact match to his teeth. Bundy also had rented a room at The Oak Apartments near the Florida State University campus. All this evidence convicted Bundy, and he was sentenced to two life sentences. In January 1980, he went to trial again for the killing of Kimberly Leach. The fibers in Ted’s van were an exact match to those of Kimberly’s clothes. This was the crucial evidence that led to Bundy’s second conviction. But witnesses Lieutenant Andy Anderson and a fellow schoolmate also played a role. Found guilty, he received his third death sentence. On January 17 1989, Ted Bundy was put to death. His death could only bring so much closure to the families of the countless victims in Florida, Utah, and Colorado.17 But his death ensured that he could never have another victim for his own malice pleasures.
- Salem Press Biographical Encyclopedia, January 2017, s.v. “Ted Bundy,” by James Jenephyr. ↵
- Salem Press Biographical Encyclopedia, January 2017, s.v. “Ted Bundy,” by James Jenephyr. ↵
- George Dekle, The Last Murder: The investigation, prosecution, and execution of Ted Bundy (Santa Barbara, Calif.: Praeger, 2011), 45. ↵
- George Dekle, The Last Murder: The investigation, prosecution, and execution of Ted Bundy (Santa Barbara, Calif.: Praeger, 2011), 47. ↵
- J. Anthony Paredes and Elizabeth D. Purdum, “Bye-bye Ted…Community response in Florida to the execution of Theodore Bundy,” Anthropology Today 6, no. 2 (April 1990): 10. ↵
- J. Anthony Paredes and Elizabeth D. Purdum, “Bye-bye Ted…Community response in Florida to the execution of Theodore Bundy,” Anthropology Today 6, no. 2 (April 1990): 11. ↵
- George Dekle, The Last Murder: The investigation, prosecution, and execution of Ted Bundy (Santa Barbara, Calif.: Praeger, 2011), 45. ↵
- George Dekle, The Last Murder: The investigation, prosecution, and execution of Ted Bundy (Santa Barbara, Calif.: Praeger, 2011), 45. ↵
- Mark Seltzer, “Serial Killers (II): The Pathological Public Sphere,” Critical Inquiry 22, no. 1 (1995): 136. ↵
- Mark Seltzer, “Serial Killers (II): The Pathological Public Sphere,” Critical Inquiry 22, no. 1 (1995): 132. ↵
- J. Anthony Paredes and Elizabeth D. Purdum, “Bye-bye Ted…Community response in Florida to the execution of Theodore Bundy,” Anthropology Today 6, no. 2 (April 1990): 11. ↵
- J. Anthony Paredes and Elizabeth D. Purdum, “Bye-bye Ted…Community response in Florida to the execution of Theodore Bundy,” Anthropology Today 6, no. 2 (April 1990): 11. ↵
- George Dekle, The Last Murder: The investigation, prosecution, and execution of Ted Bundy (Santa Barbara, Calif.: Praeger, 2011), 46. ↵
- George Dekle, The Last Murder: The investigation, prosecution, and execution of Ted Bundy (Santa Barbara, Calif.: Praeger, 2011), 46. ↵
- George Dekle, The Last Murder: The investigation, prosecution, and execution of Ted Bundy (Santa Barbara, Calif.: Praeger, 2011), 46. ↵
- George Dekle, The Last Murder: The investigation, prosecution, and execution of Ted Bundy (Santa Barbara, Calif.: Praeger, 2011), 47. ↵
- George Dekle, The Last Murder: The investigation, prosecution, and execution of Ted Bundy (Santa Barbara, Calif.: Praeger, 2011), 46. ↵
105 comments
Jose Chaman
This case is incredible. I had read about Ted Bundy before, however, this article does an incredible job recounting and staging the acts of this criminal. It is interesting to think about how people can become monsters as Ted was. His intelligence and cunning allowed him to almost get away with it, and history, as always, teaches us how we should act in these cases.
Kelsey Sanchez
wow, this story was shocking in the way Bundy almost got away with it. It is sad to read that there were many people harmed, especially women. It comes to the point where it is disturbing for many to actually hear about his story and sad to see how many were affected by it. I would agree that it is stomach twisting to know there is a murder on the loose and traveling to cause another crime. However, this made the police more aware of the situation that was occurring and how he just in general left marks even though he didn’t suspect they would notice.
Kristina Tijerina
I’ve read up on Bundy’s trial before, and it’s disturbing that this man always tried to make himself appear innocent even when evidence proved that he wasn’t. He used his charming looks to his advantage and carefully committed each of his many murders. Bundy got let off the hook so many times, and I wish that he could’ve been caught sooner so that so many innocent women and this little girl could have been saved. I feel like there was enough evidence to have him arrested prior to the time that he actually got arrested. I think that more should’ve been done to him than just getting the death sentence. I feel like the death sentence was kind of an easy way out for him because he brutally murdered so many girls. I feel like there wasn’t enough closure for the families of the victims.
Shea Slusser
Ted Bundy is now a man known worldwide because of his actions and the movie made about him on Netflix. He is what every american is afraid of, and will forever be remembered as one of the worst serial killers in history. Its so stomach twisting knowing he was unapologetic for his murders, and tried so hard to get out of all of the crimes he had committed. Knowing people like that actually exist is very unsettling, and we can only hope we never come in contact with anyone like him in our lifetimes.
Cynthia Perez
This guy was the absolute worst and completely disturbing. Its super interesting seeing how just one more person can commit so many sick acts of violence. Especially since he was someone with so much potential, and to see it all go to waste is tragic. It’s really sad thinking about how some of his actions could’ve been avoided by intervening in the sketchy van scenario, even moreso because a law enforcement officer, off duty or not, witnessed this go down. Understandably not his fault but overall, unfortunate.
Emmanuel Diaz
Its terrifying not only at what Bundy did to his victims but the fact that he was so smart about it as well. He planned out his attacks with simple details that would make him appear as weak and also because he “seemed” trustworthy and people actually found him to be attractive as well! I feel horrible for the families that were impacted by his crimes and for those as well who have been hurt by his actions. He was a very intelligent serial killer who knew exactly each step of his crime and how to avoid any possible danger of being caught. His case is a very interesting one as to the extent it achieved over the years. He killed 30 girls and would have killed more if he had not been caught.
Kathryn Martinez
What is still interesting is that nobody really knows when or where Bundy started killing women. He told different stories to different people, refusing to disclose the specifics of his earliest crimes, even as he confessed to dozens of later assassinations in the days preceding his execution in graphic detail. So while many people believe his victim count is higher, no one really knows where to start looking. In this many families may never get the closure they need to find peace.
Juan Arceo
Ted Bundy is an interesting individual and the acts that he committed are just horrible. It is sad to know that innocent girls were treated horribly when they were him. I recently watched the documentary of him and I was in shock because to the normal person, he was seen as a law student and who needed help with his car and other things. To then have the courage to go and do those acts is just disgusting and well even though I am not a big fan of the death penalty, he deserved it to protect people at the prison and just people in general so that no girl would be hurt under him.
Azucena Cuevas
It is so tragic that so many young women didn’t get the chance to live their life and that all their families are left feeling empty. I think the way he orchestrated everything takes so much effort and sick motivation. I have seen the documentary they posted over him and to think he was a law student with so much potential. It is tragic how some people choose to waste their life doing terrible things. I think the way he thought could have been a breakthrough for the criminal justice system. Ted was a mastermind when it came to deceiving almost anybody. Bundy could have, if willing, help the police understand a serial killers thought process. I just find his story so fascinating and tragic because he displayed himself as charming and wise when in reality he was a brutal serial killer.
Victoria Davis
This man was described as attractive allowing women to fall for him instantly. Ted was very clever and quick on his toes trying to escape the police from pulling him over and then escaping from prison. There was no stopping this psychotic man until he was put to death for the crimes he committed. The families may not have felt the relief of him having to suffer the same way their members did, but it was guaranteed this wasn’t going to happen to anyone ever again.