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March 27, 2018

Rodney Alcala’s Photo Massacre

Imagine your life ends just when you think it’s about to begin. This is exactly how Robin Samsoe’s life ended. In 1979, in Huntington Beach in California, twelve-year-old Robin Samsoe went to the beach with her best friend thinking she was about to start her first job at her ballet school; but, Rodney Alcala had a different plan for Robin.1 Alcala approached the best friends posing as a photographer that worked with models, and he told the girls that he was entering a competition. As flattering as it was to have a supposed professional photographer taking photos of them, nobody knew that it would be the last time that they would see Robin Samsoe alive. However, Alcala had no idea that his murder of Robin Samsoe would lead to his ultimate takedown.

Tali Shapiro | Courtesy of Boredom Therapy

Rodney Alcala was born in San Antonio, Texas. Alcala’s father left their family when Alcala was very young. However, Alcala did not let his father’s absence take a toll on him… or so everyone thought. Although most of Alcala’s peers, and even his university professors, saw him as a charming and sweet guy, Alcala would come to be known as one of the most infamous serial killers in California history. In 1968, Alcala began his journey as a serial killer when Officer Chris Camacho got a tip that there was suspicious activity going on between a young girl and grown man. Officer Camacho found Alcala in his apartment with eight-year-old Tali Shapiro. Luckily, Officer Camacho was able to keep Tali stable until an ambulance arrived, but it gave Alcala time to get away. At the time, Alcala was attending UCLA, and his classmates and professors were in disbelief about the news of Alcala becoming an alleged killer. Officer Camacho, who made detective three months after Tali Shapiro’s attack, vowed to get justice for Tali. In 1969, Alcala made the “Top 10 Most Wanted” list and his luck at getting away with assaulting Tali Shapiro began to turn. Alcala was found at a camp in New Hampshire, posing as a camp counselor under the alias John Berger.2 When two of the camp students saw Alcala’s picture on the most wanted list at their local post office, they noticed an uncanny resemblance and alerted the dean of the camp who immediately contacted the authorities. Finally, Detective Camacho was getting the justice that he promised Tali Shapiro… or so he thought. Since the Shapiro family left the country in fear of their safety, Alcala could not be properly tried without a victim. Alcala was instead given a deal: he would plead guilty to child molestation, register as a child sex offender, and serve one to ten years in prison based on behavioral terms. In August of 1974, thirty-four months after Alcala was sentenced, he was released on the basis that he was “mentally cured,” having claimed his heinous actions against Tali Shapiro were due to mind altering substances.3

Robin Samsoe, 1979 | Courtesy of Orange County Register

Eleven years later, on June 20, 1979, Robin Samsoe disappeared. Once Robin was reported missing, Detective Matt Murphy was appointed head of the case and began gathering all the information he could when he got a call from Alcala’s former parole officer. Samsoe’s best friend, Bridgette, gave a description of a man that took pictures of the two girls at the beach the day of Robin’s disappearance, and Alcala’s former parole officer noticed that the composite sketch looked a lot like one of his former case loads, Rodney Alcala. When Detective Chris Camacho (formerly the officer that saved Tali’s life) got wind of the case, he showed up as quickly as possible, ready to help take down Alcala once and for all.

Both detectives tried to talk to Alcala’s mother, but she believed that her son was innocent and would not let the officers into her home without a warrant and continuously tried to protect her son. So the detectives worked harder; they put Alcala’s (technically his mother’s) house on 24-hour surveillance. Robin Samsoe’s body was found twelve days after her reported disappearance. Her body was almost unrecognizable; there was no hair, no skin, her limbs were barely intact, and the only thing that detectives were able to identify Samsoe with were her dental records. Finally, the detectives got a search warrant for the Alcala house, but did not find much, because after hearing that Robin Samsoe’s remains were found, Alcala rented out a storage locker and hid any evidence that could incriminate him. Rodney Alcala was arrested on July 24, 1979 and was charged with the kidnap and murder of Robin Samsoe. Rodney Alcala had no alibi for his whereabouts at the time of Samsoe’s disappearance, thus making him the prime suspect3 

However, what detectives didn’t expect to get was an accidental tip from Alcala’s sister when she visited him in jail. Detectives secretly recorded Alcala and his sister’s conversation and hit the ultimate jackpot. Alcala told his sister to go to his new storage unit and empty everything out of it, to just get rid of it all; but the detectives made it to the storage unit before Alcala’s sister could. Neither Alcala nor his sister knew that, in the detectives’ search of the Alcala home, they found a receipt for a storage locker. The detectives knew they struck gold when they opened up that unit.5 There were copious amounts of photos showing Alcala’s previous victims in vulnerable positions and exposing them without remorse. There was so much evidence in this storage unit that there was no way that Alcala could get away—not this time. In the storage unit, detectives also found a small, silk bag with earrings and other “souvenirs” of Alcala’s former victims and, when they showed the contents of the bag to Robin’s mother, she pointed out a pair of gold stud earrings that Robin often borrowed from her.

Rodney Alcala during court in Orange County, 2010 | Courtesy of Allen J. Schaben, Los Angeles Times

With all of the evidence, Detectives Murphy and Camacho were almost excited for Alcala’s trial. Detective Camacho was finally getting the justice he promised to Tali Shapiro, and both detectives were bringing justice to Robin Samsoe. Nearly one year after Robin Samsoe’s murder, in February of 1980, the prosecutors were ready to take on Rodney Alcala and all his horror to the San Quentin court. After two and a half months on trial, the jury convicted Alcala as guilty and sentenced him to death. He was finally on the San Quentin death row until six years later, when the court judged that Rodney Alcala had not received a fair trial because the jury was given information of previous murders that Alcala was responsible for. The court deemed it unfair that Alcala’s jury was told about all the murders that he had previously gotten away with, so they gave him a second trial. Still, Alcala was found guilty and sentenced to death row again. As if that weren’t enough, Rodney Alcala was prepared to appeal one more time, and this time, he defended himself. In 2001, a federal appeals court overturned Alcala’s second conviction based on evidence he didn’t get to present. Before Alcala’s third and final trial in California, new DNA laws and technology linked Alcala to four more deaths in Los Angeles between 1977 and 1979, and prosecutors decided to try Rodney Alcala for all five murder cases at the same time. During his last trial in California, Alcala’s first reported victim came to the stand—it was Tali Shapiro. She was there to give her testimony of what had happened to her and talk about how appalled she was that Alcala was still free after authorities knew what he had done to her at the age of eight.

In a twisted turn of events, Alcala decided to represent himself in that third trial. He called himself to the stand and even had the nerve to call Marianne Connelly, Robin’s mother, to the stand. Alcala failed in trying to make her seem like the bad guy and ultimately turned to a plea for clemency. He explained that in choosing the death penalty, it would take 15-20 years to finally have him legally murdered. Although this information was true and further information stated that it would be far more expensive to execute someone as opposed to keeping them in prison for life, the jury still found Aclala guilty of first degree murder.6 Finally, in 2010 in San Quentin, Rodney Alcala was found guilty of not only Robin Samsoe’s death, but of the other four deaths as well. Alcala was sentenced to five death rows for each girl’s murder.7

However, now that Alcala’s California cases were settled, he was then tried in New York for the murders of two young ladies that were previously left as cold cases. In June of 2012, Rodney Alcala returned to New York to face yet two more murder trials, and by December of that same year, he pled guilty to both murders. Not only was Alcala sentenced to death in California (to which he was to be returned after his New York convictions), but he was also sentenced to two concurrent prison terms of twenty-five years to life in prison in New York. This meant, if by some odd miracle, Alcala got off of death row and out of prison in California, he still had to serve twenty-five years to life in prison in New York. By the end of 2012, Alcala had been convicted of seven murders and found guilty for all of them; he was also sentenced to five death rows and two twenty-five years to life in prison sentences.

Although Alcala is locked up for seven murders already, there are still so many unidentified pictures of girls and young women that were found in Alcala’s storage unit. Thus far, about twenty women have come forward as being the women in the pictures and exposed Alcala and his ways of conning the young women.8 Were there more victims of Alcala’s photo massacre? Or were they just coincidental photos of Alcala’s “models”? How many other victims of Alcala are we going to discover over the years–either through technological improvement or just coming forward?

  1. Alex Tresniowski and Howard Breuer, “The Eye of a Killer,” People 73, no. 15 (April 19, 2010): 86.
  2. Stephen J. Giannangelo, Real-Life Monsters: A Psychological Examination of the Serial Murderer (Santa Barbara, Calif: Praeger, 2012), 104-108.
  3. The Dating Game Killer, directed by Peter Medak (2017; USA: Thinkfactory Media, Light and Dark Films, 2017), DVD.
  4. The Dating Game Killer, directed by Peter Medak (2017; USA: Thinkfactory Media, Light and Dark Films, 2017), DVD.
  5. Peter Van Sant, “Rodney Alcala: The Killing Game,” CBS News, Feb. 17, 2018.
  6. Simon Scott, “Death Penalty Judge: ‘Let’s Stop The Charade,’” Weekend Edition Saturday of NPR, April 2, 2011.
  7. Larry Welborn and Rachanee Srisavasdi, “California Man Convicted of 5 Murders from 70s,” The Orange County Register (Santa Ana, CA), February 25, 2010.
  8. Alex Tresniowski and Howard Breuer, “The Eye of a Killer”, People 73, no. 15 (April 19, 2010): 86.

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Miranda Alamilla

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85 comments

  • Tessa Bodukoglu

    hearing about cases that involve young kids is horrifying to me. someone would have to be so mentally ill to think that harming a young child is acceptable in any form or fashion. I have never heard of this case before but reading this gave me a much better perspective on what some people are capable are. I am glad that he got his punishment and was convicted for the crimes that he was committed for and that he is serving his time. this was a very well written article and was very informative.

  • Peter Coons

    Acalas is a killer and deviant I have never heard of before reading this article. To think that a man had such gal to represent himself in court when the evidence was so stacked against him in hope of, I assume, there being a mistrial is something out of an episode of Law and Order. For years he was able to get away with his crimes on a technicality, and the Author of this article does a fantastic job of outlining the key players, timeline, and trials that would lead to an unheard of level of sentences for one lone criminal.

  • Avery Looney

    Before reading this article I had never heard about this case. This story is so sad, and the fact that he was able to kill as many people as he did is heartbreaking. I can’t imagine all of the pain that Alaca put Robin Samsoe’s family through. He brutally murdered Robin and forced the family to relive the worst day of their lives on numerous occasions because of the many trials he had. It is crazy to think that one of California’s most notorious serial killers came from San Antonio. Overall the story was very captivating and the author did a great job on the research behind it.

  • Marina Castro

    It is often seen cases being unsolved when it comes to serial killers. To know that a man was finally sentenced for all the damaged he caused to other people is a relief. Individuals like him should be kept away from society. Although it seems as if the police don’t know for sure if they solved all his cases, a fair amount was solved for the families of the victim.

  • Didier Cadena

    Before reading this article, I was unsure of who Alcala was, so it was interesting to be able to read a little bit about him. His whole case is a strange one, with how how many times he went to court and how he received two different sentences in two different states. The man had done unspeakable crimes and rightfully deserved his sentences. The article does a great job of putting all of the information together and still keep you hooked.

  • Kathyleen Lauriano

    Its sad to think theirs people out in the world like this. Judging by the picture I would have never guessed he would do something like that. This just shows we don’t really know who people are. Our world is nothing like it used to be, were we can trust people to be good. I feel bad for Robin’s family. Nobody should have to go through that.

  • Roman Olivera

    Rodney Alcala was a name that I had never heard of in the serial killer realm before reading this article. This man had a sick mind and it was surprising that he stayed free to commit the crimes he committed for so long. Thanks to the diligent Detective Camacho justice was served for all Acala’s victims. Tali Shapiro is one of the victims of this man that survived and whose testimony help convict this monster and she should be commended for her bravery. The Robin Samsoe murder was what got this man caught but it really reflects the savage that he was with after only 12 days finding her in the condition they found her in. I reading the article I wondered why the mother protected him and it seems that his sister may have known what he doing as well. If so, why were they not charged with obstruction of justice? In any case, I’m glad this man was caught and I think with this many charges of murder, how can he just sit on death row for so long. Crank that electric chair up and get the buzzing going.

  • Alexandra Rodriguez

    It is insane to think that people are actually capable of committing these types of crimes, especially to children. It is so disgusting that people, like his mother, could be oblivious to his devious acts, or just flat out ignore them. Where did these inhumane habits start? There has to have been signs or odd things about him as he developed this behavior and she just chose to ignore it, or just didn’t notice it. Another thing crazy about this is the fact that he was able to get away with it for so long. It must’ve been so hard on the police officer who saved Tali’s life because he had to let Alcala escape in order to save a little girls life. Those decisions have to be the hardest in law enforcement. Its so shocking and scary to think that anyone you talk to today could be just as twisted or dangerous as Alcala.

  • Belene Cuellar

    I can’t believe he kept little souvenirs of all the victims he killed. His dedication and lack of regret is what disgusted me the most. He didn’t feel bad about his actions he just felt bad because he got caught. This article was well written and descriptive in this killers actions. I still can’t believe he got away the first time when the authorities knew what he did to that poor eight year old.

  • Alexandria Zapata

    I had to read this article twice because, it just surprises me that he went trial so many times, when he was guilty of murdering all those girls and women. Also being caught as a murderer in another state. However, it was a very interesting article to read, especially about the part where many of the women and children in the pictures that were found in his storage unit, are still unidentified to this day.

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