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Richard Ramirez: The story, the evidence, the Night Stalker

Richard Ramirez: The story, the evidence, the Night Stalker

CBSN
Friday, May 21, 2021 09:06:26 PM UTC

Richard Ramirez was known by many names. His family called him Richie. Los Angeles' KNBC called him the Walk-In Killer. To others, he was the Valley Intruder, but the name that stuck, the one that the news media (and Ramirez himself) latched onto, was the Night Stalker.

As far as authorities know, he was 24 the first time he took a life. June 2021 marks 37 years since Ramirez's first murder — or, least, the first one that earned him a conviction. Richard Ramirez grew up in El Paso, Texas — the product of a violent family. According to a 1996 biography, Ramirez's father was physically abusive. In 1982, when Ramirez was 22, he moved from Texas to California. His crimes may have begun sooner than authorities first thought. On June 28, 1984, Jack Vincow visited his mother's apartment in Los Angeles' Glassell Park neighborhood. He noticed a window screen missing, the front door unlocked and his mother's belongings scattered around the home. Nearly eight months passed after the Jennie Vincow murder before Ramirez would claim another victim. The Los Angeles Lakers were also in the midst of the legendary "Showtime" era. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Magic Johnson led the team to the NBA Finals in the summer of 1984. The timing for the Night Stalker's reign of terror couldn't have been worse. Los Angeles was already reeling from its run-in with another serial killer. It was sheriff's detective Frank Salerno who led the investigation of the Hillside Strangler case. He made a name for himself then as a talented homicide investigator.  By March 1985, Ramirez had escalated his violence. Within a 10-day period, there had been five more attacks, with just one victim left alive. Maria Hernandez of Rosemead was able to escape. All the while, in February and March 1985, there were a series of child abductions in Montebello, Monterey Park and Glassell Park. All of the children were sexually assaulted and then abandoned. Detective Gil Carrillo spotted the similarities between the children's description and the one given by Maria Hernandez. Both Hernandez and the abducted children described their attacker as tall and light-skinned with brown-stained teeth, a pungent odor and a Member's Only-style jacket. Carrillo went to his mentor and fellow detective Frank Salerno with his hunch. In late spring 1985, Carrillo learned of another shoe print that might link the murders to the child abductions. Soon after, Carrillo and Salerno became partners. By this time, there had been yet another attack.  As the summer wore on, more people reported similar nighttime break-ins and attacks in nearby cities of Monrovia, Burbank and Arcadia. After the police determined that the attacks around the city were likely all by one assailant, they started looking into other similar cases from the same period. Carrillo and Salerno tracked that stolen Toyota to a nearby impound lot.  July 7, 1985, two days after the Bennett attack, 60-year-old Joyce Nelson was murdered in her home in Monterey Park. The same night, less than a mile away, Sophie Dickman was sexually assaulted in her Monterey Park home. The media coverage had citizens scared that they — that just about anyone — could fall victim to this still-unknown prowler. The day after the Nelson murder, Carrillo and Salerno finally got their hands on the stolen Toyota. But they weren't able to recover any fingerprints. Police paid a visit to the dentist's office and discovered that their suspect had just visited five days earlier, not long before the Bennett, Nelson and Dickman attacks. At the end of July, Ramirez struck again, this time killing Lela and Maxon Kneiding in Glendale, California. The same morning that police were investigating the Kneiding murders, another body turned up a few miles away in Sun Valley. Two more Avia prints were found at the Sun Valley crime scene. A few days later, in Northridge, California, Ramirez walked through an unlocked door to the home of husband and wife Chris and Virginia Peterson and shot both in head. Two nights after the botched Northridge attack, the killer broke into a home in Diamond Bar, a city in eastern Los Angeles County. Ten days after the Diamond Bar attack, San Francisco Police were called to the scene of a now all-too-familiar crime.  Then-mayor of San Francisco Dianne Feinstein gave a press conference shortly after the Pan murders. Two more botched attacks happened in Orange County in late August 1985. Then, young man named James Romero came forward with some information: He'd seen a suspicious car in his Mission Viejo neighborhood.  Romero reported seeing an orange Toyota station wagon with a license plate that included the numbers 8 and 2. Shortly afterward, Romero's car sighting was shared with the local news media. Then another man came forward. He told investigators that a friend recently had an orange Toyota station wagon stolen in Chinatown.  Police quickly located the vehicle, a 1976 orange Toyota station wagon, in a parking lot in downtown Los Angeles. Back then, California's fingerprint system was not yet automated. Police needed a suspect to compare the prints from the stolen car. Meanwhile, San Francisco police were also chasing down a lead surrounding a Rick from El Paso. Police finally had a name. There were eight people named Richard Ramirez with fingerprints in the police's records, and one was a perfect match. Police released the name and photo to the media, and by the next morning, Richard Ramirez was on the front page of the Los Angeles Herald Examiner, and his name and photo were all over the TV news. As soon as Ramirez started running, people recognized him from the newspapers.  A few blocks away, he tried to carjack Angelina De La Torre. He screamed at her, in Spanish, to give him the keys. She refused. Hearing the commotion, neighbors came outside and surrounded Ramirez.  Shortly after Ramirez was apprehended, he proclaimed to police, "It's me!" Outside the Hollenbeck police station, a crowd had gathered, hoping to get a glimpse of the man who had caused so much fear and horror in the summer of 1985. Here, Gil Carrillo and Frank Salerno escort Ramirez from Hollenbeck station to his transport to Men's Central Jail in Chinatown. The bravery of the residents of Boyle Heights was officially recognized by the City of Los Angeles.  Here, a police officer stands guard in front of a cache of stolen items recovered after Richard Ramirez's capture. This is Anastasia Hronas, who survived an abduction at age 6. In August of 1985, police brought her, and other victims, to the jail to see if they would pick Ramirez out of a lineup. He wore the number 2 on his chest. Richard Ramirez's parents, Julián and Mercedes Ramirez (pictured), solicited the help of an upstart team of defense attorneys from El Paso. In July 1988, Ramirez made his first court appearance. He pleaded not guilty to all of the charges against him. In 1996, Richard Ramirez married longtime fan Doreen Lioy at San Quentin Prison in California. Lioy left Ramirez in 2009, when his DNA was matched to samples collected at the 1994 San Francisco murder scene. Before his 26th birthday, he would kill at least 13 more people and commit at least 11 sexual assaults, in a wave of seemingly random attacks that terrified residents of Southern California in the summer of 1985. Richard's older cousin, Miguel Ramirez, often bragged about crimes he committed in Vietnam, even showing young Richard a photo of himself posing with the severed head of a Vietnamese woman he had abused.  In 2009, police matched Ramirez's DNA with a sample collected at the scene of an unsolved murder of a 9-year-old girl in San Francisco in 1984.  Then, he found his 79-year-old mother's body. Jennie Vincow's throat had been slashed, and she had been stabbed repeatedly. He ran to the building manager to call the police. The Night Stalker would strike during a delicate time for Los Angeles; it was hosting the 1984 Summer Olympics. They lost to the Celtics in a seven-game series. Just eight years earlier, from 1977 to 1978, two cousins who together became known as the Hillside Stranger killed at least 10 women and dumped their bodies on local hillsides. After five months of poring through evidence, police arrested cousins Angelo Buono Jr. and Kenneth Bianchi. The third and fourth murders took place at the Whittier home of Vincent and Maxine Zazzara. This is where police found their first clue to the identity of the Night Stalker — a shoe print from a men's Avia sneaker. One of those children was 6-year-old Anastasia Hronas. She and the other children provided police with a description of their kidnapper that raised alarms — and inspired a hunch — for one homicide detective. As he recounted in Netflix's 2021 documentary "Night Stalker: The Hunt for a Serial Killer," he thought that, just maybe, all of these crimes were committed by one man. So, Carrillo took his suspicions to his fellow homicide detectives. Salerno said it was unheard of for a criminal to have such wide-ranging types of victims — men, women and children — and such varied methods of killing; Ramirez had used guns and knives, to this point. A child was taken from the Montebello area and assaulted at a nearby construction site. The cement at the site was still wet, and the print was extremely similar to the one found at the Zazzara home. On May 14, 1985, a man entered the home of husband and wife Bill and Lillian Doi of Monterey Park. Bill was killed, and Lillian was robbed and sexually assaulted. On July 5, Whitney Bennett, then 16, was attacked with a tire iron in her parents home in Sierra Madre. Though badly wounded, she survived. While examining the crime scene, police found another shoe print, just like the first two, on Bennett's comforter. One case that raised alarms with Carrillo and Salerno was an attempted abduction near Eagle Rock, a neighborhood in northeast Los Angeles. A victim police would describe as a "young female" fought off a would-be abductor who drove away in a Toyota. They requested to print the car, but they couldn't access the vehicle for weeks. In the meantime, the killer was still on the loose, and the clock was ticking. Police found Avia sneaker footprints on the side of Nelson's head and on the concrete outside of her home. Dickman would later quote Ramirez as saying, "don't look at me" during the attack.  Thousands of tips poured in to the sheriff's hotlines. Still, there was one clue left inside — a business card for a local dentist in Chinatown. Ramirez was using the alias "Richard Mena" and a fake address. The dentist gave the police X-ray scans that showed an impacted tooth. Police efforts to intercept the killer at the dentist's office were unsuccessful. The gun used in the Kneiding murders matched the one used in the Dayle Okazaki case back in March. Chainarong Khovananth was found shot to death with a 22-caliber gun, the same gun used in the Kneiding and Okazaki killings. His wife and son were sexually assaulted but left alive. At this point, police released a composite drawing of the suspect. Luckily, neither bullet hit any vital organs. Virginia Peterson screamed, and Chris reportedly got out of bed and chased Ramirez out of their house.  Again, the husband was executed. Shell casings at the scene matched the ones found at the Northridge shooting.  The husband, 66-year-old Peter Pan, had been shot and killed, the wife, Barbara Pan, was raped and shot but survived the attack. A Satanic symbol was carved into the wall. She publicly revealed, for the first time, that police had tied the cases together with shell casings and the Avia shoe print. Romero recalled the make and model of the car and part of the license plate. This turned out to be an enormously valuable tip. The plates matched. The Orange County crime lab processed the car and hit the jackpot the police had been waiting for these many months: a fingerprint. So, police continued following other leads to track down the man now known as the Night Stalker. Los Angeles detectives followed a tip from a local woman whose father believed he had befriended the killer. He told police about a man from El Paso, Texas, who went by Rick — a man who openly bragged about still-confidential information about the Night Stalker murders. That trail of clues, involving a stolen bracelet, led them to a man named Armando Rodriguez, a friend to Ramirez. Rodriguez was the one who told them the Night Stalker's name was Richard Ramirez. Ramirez had previously been booked for grand theft auto and some petty theft. Police took this 1984 booking photo to the informant in San Francisco. He identified the man in the photo as Richard Ramirez — the Night Stalker. That morning, Ramirez walked into a liquor store in downtown Los Angeles and saw his face on the front page of the newspaper. He ran. He sprinted across the 5 Freeway, into Boyle Heights, where he unsuccessfully tried to carjack Faustino Pinon (seen here on the left). Her husband, Manuel De La Torre, ran out of his house and hit Ramirez in the head with a metal pole. According to local police who first responded to reports of a fight in the area, the crowd was waving and pointing at newspapers saying that the man they were detaining was the Night Stalker. At this point, little doubt remained that Ramirez was the one behind the Night Stalker attacks. Police tried to keep control of the group as Ramirez was escorted out of the station. Onlookers cheered as Ramirez was placed in the squad car. Some of the men who helped detain and capture Ramirez during the manhunt were awarded with plaques. Valuables from many of the victims' homes were collected as evidence. After the lineup of men read statements attributed to the Night Stalker aloud, Gil Carrillo asked the witnesses if they had any questions. Young Anastasia raised her hand and asked, "Do I write the word two or the number 2?" Daniel and Arturo Hernandez, Ramirez's defense team, had never defended a case of this magnitude. But before he left the courtroom, Ramirez raised his hand to show a drawing of a pentagram on his palm. "Hail Satan," he said as he exited the room.  Ramirez died in 2013 of complications from B-cell lymphoma while awaiting execution.
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