New DNA evidence questions whether 1978, 1984 murders are linked
SAN DIEGO
— The crimes were chillingly similar. The same San Diego beach. Two
teen girls beaten in the head, mutilated with a knife, parts of the
breast sliced off. Strangled to death. Wet sand stuffed in their mouths.
Barbara
Nantais, 15, and Claire Hough, 14, were both out-of-towners, from Long
Beach and Rhode Island, respectively, who felt the same draw to Torrey
Pines State Beach on August days, six years apart.
For
decades, as their murders remained unsolved, it was hard to mention one
case without mentioning the other. There were just too many
similarities to imagine the brunettes weren’t killed by the same person.
Last
week, San Diego police said they’ve solved one of the murders. DNA
evidence linked two men — retired San Diego police criminalist Kevin
Charles Brown and violent criminal Ronald Clyde Tatro — to Claire’s 1984
killing, police said.
But no evidence has surfaced that links either one to Barbara’s 1978 death, said San Diego homicide Capt. Al Guaderrama.
Barbara’s
murder is still an open investigation, but police say Claire’s killing
is case closed. Tatro died in 2011 in an apparent boating accident in
Tennessee. And on Tuesday, Brown’s body was found hanging from a tree in
Cuyamaca State Park in an apparent suicide.
Brown’s
widow is adamant that her husband is innocent, and that his suicide was
not an admission of guilt but of being driven mad by the police’s
accusations against him. She claims his DNA match doesn’t implicate him
of murder, but is instead proof of contamination of evidence at the
police lab where he worked for 20 years — a possibility that authorities
say has been ruled out.
The
strikingly similar murders that have haunted detectives for decades
have diverged into complex investigations, sparking fresh questions with
no easy answers. Are there more clues to be uncovered, or have the best
leads died with the two suspects?
Danger at the beach
Barbara’s
body was found on the beach, near lifeguard tower #7, the morning of
Aug. 13, 1978. She had driven down from Long Beach with her boyfriend at
the time, and the couple had spent the night in zipped-together
sleeping bags on the sand. Her boyfriend was beaten unconscious in his
sleep, and he stumbled dazed and bloodied the next morning to a car
where his friends were sleeping.
Her
body was found nude, spread eagle, her right nipple sliced off. She had
facial injuries, a cracked skull and strangulation marks, according to
the autopsy report.
Claire’s
body suffered many of the same injuries. The Rhode Island teen was
visiting her grandparents, who lived in nearby Del Mar Heights. She
walked to the beach alone on Aug. 23, 1984, with a portable radio and
pack of cigarettes. A man who lived in the area found her body about 5
a.m. and called police from a nearby convenience store.
Claire
was found lying on a white towel, her body mutilated by cuts, her face
bruised, her left breast removed with a knife. Her jeans were found torn
open and pulled halfway down her hips.
Police have not said whether
either teen was raped, although both autopsy reports show the girls
suffered injuries consistent with sexual assault of some kind. No semen
was recovered from their bodies.
Investigators
recovered DNA from three unidentified females and two males that was
found on cigarette butts near Claire’s body, police said. Witnesses told
police that they saw a group of people hanging out on the beach in that
area that night.
Cases linked
The FBI
offered assistance to the investigations, and in 1995 told police the
killings were likely committed by the same perpetrator. The cold case
homicide website also suggested a connection.
Claire’s parents, Samuel and Penelope Hough, had their own suspicions.
When
the grieving parents visited the site of their daughter’s murder two
days later, they spoke with a lifeguard, who told them the man who had
discovered Claire’s body was down the beach. The man, Wallace Howard
Wheeler, was known in the area. He collected aluminum cans.
At
first they started toward him, but thought better of it. They felt sure
the discovery would have been shocking to him. Maybe he was a suspect.
“Despite
popular fiction and television programs, amateurs don’t solve criminal
cases, and that’s not what we were there for,” Samuel Hough said in a
recent interview.
But
Wheeler sought them out. He proceeded to inform the family, with
seemingly little sympathy, that he was a psychic and had envisioned an
angelic girl would be killed by two men. When Samuel and Penelope
returned to Rhode Island, they received letters every week for more than
a month from the strange man on the beach.
“His letters were bizarre,” he said.
Samuel
Hough said he would photocopy the notes and send them to police.
Guaderrama said detectives investigated Wheeler, but determined fairly
quickly that he wasn’t involved in the death.
Claire’s
father said he didn’t remember if that conclusion was something
detectives shared with him early on, but if they did, he and his wife
likely didn’t put much stock in it. He was the only likely suspect in
their minds — until the DNA matches.
The parents were told about Brown’s death days ago.
Wheeler
also met a tragic end. He jumped off the 13th-floor balcony of his
downtown San Diego apartment building in 1988 at the age of 65. He had
been diagnosed with emotional problems and had not been taking his
medication of late, his daughter told authorities. He had tried to kill
himself two years earlier by driving off a cliff, she said. Numerous
writings on his thoughts on religion were found in his apartment, the
autopsy report said.
Cases reopened
In
2012, the cold case team took yet another crack at both murder
investigations. Around the same time, Barbara’s former boyfriend, who
was beaten alongside her in the first attack, was putting pressure on
investigators to solve the crimes, according to his blog posts.
“This is a case we really wanted to solve,” Guaderrama said Friday.
Police
ran DNA from the evidence through a national database of criminals’ DNA
for a match. As it turns out, the database also includes DNA and
fingerprints of crime lab personnel, to safeguard against false matches.
In
November 2012, the database got a hit on both Tatro and Brown on
samples taken from Claire’s body, launching an exhaustive follow-up
investigation. Guaderrama said all efforts were made to determine if the
criminalist’s DNA somehow contaminated the evidence mistakenly, and
investigations concluded that was impossible. Brown never worked on any
part of the case, the homicide captain said.
Guaderrama said the case against the two men involves other evidence, but he declined to elaborate for now.
Investigators
determined Tatro, an Army veteran, had died a year earlier. When they
tried to link him to the first murder, they found he was nowhere near
San Diego. He was serving prison time in 1978 for a kidnapping in
Arkansas. He had snatched a young woman from a liquor store, stuffed her
in the trunk of his car, and raped her. He was sentenced to 40 years in
prison, but for unknown reasons, only served eight, Guaderrama said. He
was out before Claire’s killing. A year later he kidnapped a La Mesa
teen. He was sentenced to another three years in prison.
The
investigation turned to Brown, whose suspected involvement continues to
leave doubts, particularly for those who knew him. He passed an
independently administered polygraph test, his lawyer said. But the
accusations — whether true or not — appear to have been too much. His
wife was told there was no suicide note.
As for the first murder, Brown’s lawyer said he also had an alibi: He was working in New Mexico.
Staff writer Lyndsay Winkley contributed to this report.
Phuket lifeguards close beach, urge tourists to heed warnings
Phuket Gazette - October 7, 2014 | 06:16 PM
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Phuket Gazette - October 7, 2014 | 06:16 PM
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