Man dismembers girlfriend in Quarter; cooks body parts

By Walt Philbin
Staff Writer

A suicide note in the pocket of a man who jumped off the Omni Royal 
Orleans Hotel late Tuesday led police to the grisly scene of his 
girlfriend's murder, where they found her charred head in a pot on 
the stove, her legs and feet baked in the oven and the rest of her 
dismembered body in trash bag in the refrigerator, according to 
police and the couple's landlord. 

The man, Zackery Bowen, a tall man in his mid 20s with long blond 
hair, claimed in the note to have killed his girlfriend, 
Adrian "Addie" Hall, on Oct. 5, according to police. Hall was also 
in her mid 20s. 

In the five-page note, Bowen claimed he strangled Hall in the 
bathtub, then dismembered her body before taking it in pieces to the 
kitchen, police said. An autopsy conducted today shows that Hall was 
in fact manually strangled, police said. It also appears that Hall's 
body was cut up after she died, police said. 

"He appeared to clean up the bathroom a lot after he did it," one 
officer said. 

Police found the victim's head burned beyond recognition in a pot on 
top of the stove, and her legs and feet in the same condition in 
pans inside the oven, police said. 

Bowen was from Los Angeles, but apparently had lived in the New 
Orleans area for quite a while, police said. Friends said he served 
in the military in Iraq and Afghanistan and displayed both pride and 
bitterness over that experience.

Detectives said they were compiling a detailed profile of Bowen to 
submit as soon as possible to the FBI's VICAP (Violent Criminal 
Apprehension Program) center. VICAP is a nationwide data information 
center designed to collect acts of violence that might be serial in 
nature and recognized by other jurisdictions with access to VICAP as 
similar to a crime that they investigated. 

Shortly after Oct. 1, the couple had rented an apartment together at 
826 N. Rampart Street above a voodoo shop, said their landlord, Leo 
Watermeier, who recently ran a campaign for mayor. 

The couple seemed happy at first, he said, though that would soon 
break down. 

"He may have in retrospect seemed a little troubled," Watermeier 
said in an interview early Wednesday morning, shortly after he led 
investigators to the gruesome scene inside the apartment. 

Last Sunday, several days after he claimed in his suicide note to 
have killed her, Bowen appeared "all jolly, talking about the trip 
he was going to take," said Lisa Perilloux, a regular at Buffa's 
bar, where Bowen worked a weekly bartending gig. 

Bowen had told several co-workers and friends there he planned to 
take a "much-needed vacation" to Cozumel or some other island 
resort, said Donovan Kalabaza, a fellow bartender and friend. 

"Just think, tomorrow night, you'll be in paradise," Kalabaza 
recalled telling him. 

Sunday afternoon, Bowen came in briefly in the afternoon, drinking 
with two other guys. 

"He was a great mood, best mood I've ever seen him in." 

Bowen jumped to his death two nights later. 

Though they appeared happy when they rented the Rampart Street 
apartment — telling Watermeier they had fallen in love on the night 
Hurricane Katrina struck and Hall gave Bowen shelter — they soon had 
a bitter falling out, Watermeier said. After the storm, the couple 
lived a vagabond existence in the shattered city, becoming feature 
fodder for the swarm of national media eager to profile post-flood 
diehards. 

But on Oct. 5, during a dispute over which of their names would 
appear on the lease, Hall told Watermeier she intended to kick Bowen 
out of the apartment, after finding out that he had cheated on her, 
Watermeier said. 

Bowen did not take the news well, Watermeier said. 

"He said, `Did you just let her sign a lease alone? Because I'm 
screwed. I'm totally messed up now. She's trying to kick me out of 
our apartment," Watermeier said. 

Hall admitted she was trying to throw Bowen out, he said. 

"I caught him cheating on me, and I am kicking him out of this 
apartment," she told Watermeier. 

Watermeier told the couple to work through their differences and get 
back to him. He never saw Hall again, and assumed they'd worked it 
out. 

Police came to Watermeier's door about 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, shortly 
after Bowen committed suicide, asking if he knew a tall man with 
long blonde hair, and if he had a connection with the apartment at 
826 N. Rampart St. 

He took them to the apartment, he said, where they warned him he 
might not want to enter. Investigators told Watermeier what they 
found, however: charred body parts strewn about the kitchen. 

Hall was also not from New Orleans, Watermeier said, but both she 
and Bowen seemed "hard core" about the city and proud that they had 
stayed here through Katrina. 

Bowen's suicide was first discovered Tuesday when his body was 
spotted below by someone in an upper floor lounge. It was soon 
determined that Bowen had jumped from an outside terrace near a 
swimming pool on an upper floor to the roof of the Chartres Street 
garage on the second floor, police said. 

A surveillance camera showed him walking several times to the edge 
of a ledge on the upper floor, then retreating, then returning 
again, until he finally plunged, police said. 

Police found the five-page suicide note in his pocket, which not 
only led him to the scene of the murder, but included information on 
an out-of-state person who should be contacted after he was found, 
police said. 

As the news began to filter through the French Quarter and Faubourg 
Marigny — where the couple worked, drank and at times argued — 
friends and co-workers relayed details of their personalities, their 
demons, and the tumultuous last weeks in their lives. Some offered 
portraits of a loving couple that sometimes fought; others painted a 
darker portrait of a dysfunctional couple at perpetual war. 

Perilloux said she never heard Bowen speak anything but ill of Hall. 

"He was getting rid of her," she said, meaning he was trying to 
break up with her. "He used to complain about her to me. It was 
revolving door." 

She also relayed an recent incident where Hall screamed expletives 
at Bowen through the front door of Buffa's, in front of a crowd of 
regulars. Associates of Bowen described him as a strapping, smooth-
talking man who flirted with other women, often making Hall often 
jealous. Karen Lott, owner of Buffa's bar on Esplanade, where Hall 
worked one bartending shift a week, said she had hired him as "eye 
candy for the ladies" after meeting him when he made deliveries to 
her from Matassa's. 

"The customers loved him. Everyone loved him," she said, still 
reeling from the news of his suicide and her gruesome murder. 

They knew Hall well at Buffa's, too, where she often sat at the 
other end of the bar, often staring admiringly at Bowen as he either 
served drinks or ordered his own, almost always a Miller High Life 
and a shot of Jameson Irish Whiskey. When loud music drowned out 
their conversation, she would pass him notes, often to tell him she 
loved him, said Donovan Kalabaza, 34, a fellow bartender at Buffa's 
and friend of both Hall and Bowen. 

Ed Parrish, co-owner of the Spotted Cat bar on Frenchman Street, 
where Hall worked up until a month ago, said he could tell something 
had gone awry in her life. She started missing work, then coming 
back to apologize and seek to save her job. 

"I had a feeling something was seriously wrong," he said. 

She had worked there for about a year, he said, before becoming 
unreliable. After not showing up for shifts three times, Parrish 
never saw her again. 

Eura Jones, who cleans the bar in the mornings, had not heard about 
the gruesome killings until told by a reporter early Wednesday. She 
described Hall a "real friendly" and "a real pretty girl" who was 
smitten with Bowen. 

"She loved that guy. She really loved him," Jones said, though she 
added the couple squabbled often. 

Reporters Steve Ritea, Laura Maggi and Trymaine Lee contributed to 
this story.




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