Chicago, Dec 12: Detectives
have long wondered what secrets serial killer John Wayne Gacy and other
condemned murderers took to the grave when they were executed — mostly whether
they had other unknown victims.
Now, in a game of scientific catch-up,
the Cook County Sheriff's Department is trying to be creative: They've created
DNA profiles of Gacy and others and figured out they could get the executed men
entered in a national database shared with other law enforcement agencies
because the murderers were technically listed as homicide victims when they were
put to death by the state.
The department's hope is to find matches of
DNA evidence from blood, semen or strands of hair, or skin under the fingernails
of victims that link the long-dead killers to the coldest of cold cases. And
they're hoping to prompt authorities in other states to submit the DNA of their
own executed inmates or from decades-old crime scenes.
"You just know
some of these guys did other murders" that were never solved, said Jason Moran,
the sheriffs' detective leading the effort, noting that some of the executed
killers ranged all over the country before the convictions that put them behind
bars for the last time.
The Illinois testing, which began during the
summer, is the latest chapter in a story that began when Sheriff Tom Dart
exhumed the remains of unknown victims of Gacy to create DNA profiles that could
be compared with the DNA of people whose loved ones went missing in the 1970s,
when Gacy was killing young men.
That effort, which led to the
identification of one Gacy victim, caused Dart to wonder if the technology could
help answer a question that has been out there for decades: Did Gacy kill anyone
besides those young men whose bodies were stashed under his house or tossed in a
river?
"He traveled a lot," Moran said of Gacy. "Even though we don't
have any information he committed crimes elsewhere, the sheriff asked if you
could put it past such an evil person."
After unexpectedly finding three
vials of Gacy's blood stored with other Gacy evidence, Moran learned the state
would only accept the blood in the crime database if it came from a coroner or
medical examiner.
Moran thought he was out of luck. But then Will County
Coroner Patrick O'Neil surprised him with this revelation: In his office freezer
were blood samples from Gacy and at least three other executed inmates. The
reason they were there is because after the death penalty was reinstated in
Illinois in the 1970s, executions were carried out in Will County — all between
1990 and 1999, a year before then-Gov. George Ryan established a moratorium on
the death penalty. So it was O'Neil's office that conducted the autopsies and
collected the blood samples.
While the state does send to the FBI's
Combined DNA Index System the profiles of homicide victims no matter when they
were killed, it will only send the profiles of known felons if they were
convicted since a new state law was enacted about a decade ago that allowed them
to be included, Moran said.
That meant the profile of Gacy, who received
a lethal injection in 1994, and the profiles of other executed inmates could not
qualify for the database under the felon provision. They could, however, qualify
as people who died by homicide.
"They're homicides because the state
intended to take the inmate's life," O'Neil said.
Last year, authorities
in Florida created a DNA profile from the blood of executed serial killer Ted
Bundy in an attempt to link him to other murders. But officials there, where the
law allows profiles of convicted felons be uploaded into the database as well as
the phase-in of profiles of people arrested on felony charges, don't know of any
law enforcement agency reaching back into history the way Cook County's
sheriff's office is.
"We haven't had any initiative where we are going
back to executed offenders and asking for their samples," said David Coffman,
director of Florida Department of Law Enforcement's laboratory system. "I think
it's an innovative approach."
O'Neil said he is still looking for blood
samples of the rest of the 12 condemned inmates executed between 1977 when
Illinois reinstated the death penalty and 2000 when then-Gov. George Ryan
established a moratorium. So far, DNA profiles have been done on the blood of
Gacy and two others; the profile of the fourth inmate has not yet been
done.
Among the other executed inmates whose blood was submitted for
testing was Lloyd Wayne Hampton, a drifter executed in 1998 for his crimes. Not
only did Hampton's long list of crimes include crimes outside the state — one
conviction was for the torture of a woman in California — but shortly before he
was put to death, he claimed to have committed other murders but never provided
details.
So far, no computer hits have linked Gacy or the others to any
other crimes. But Moran and O'Neil suspect there are investigators who are
holding DNA evidence that could help solve them.
That is exactly what
happened during the investigation into the 1993 slayings of seven people at a
suburban Chicago restaurant, during which an evidence technician collected a
half-eaten chicken dinner even though there was no way to test it for DNA at the
time.
When the technology did become available, the dinner was tested and
it revealed the identity of one of two men ultimately convicted in the
slayings.
Moran says he wants investigators in other states to know that
Gacy's blood is now open for analysis in their unsolved murders. He hopes those
jurisdictions will, in turn, submit DNA profiles of their own executed
inmates.
"That is part of the DNA system that's not being tapped into,"
he said.
Ends
SA/EN
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Gacy's blood may solve old murders
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