Kathy E <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:


Born in 1948, the son of a retired navy admiral turned international
engineer, Douglas Clark had lived in 37 countries by the time he       
settled in Southern California. He liked to call himself "the king of
the one-night stands," supplementing his machinist's income through
affairs with frowsy matrons, reserving his leisure time for kinky
liaisons with underaged girls and young women. In private moments, he
cherished dark fantasies of rape and murder, mutilation and necrophilia
earning for the moment when his dreams could graduate to stark reality.

At age 37, Carol Bundy was typical of Clark's conquests. A vocational
nurse, the overweight mother of two had left her abusive husband in   
January 1979, quickly falling in love with the manager of her new
apartment building. A native of Australia, 45-year-old John Murray sang
part-time in a local country-western bar, but he was never too busy to
help out a tenant in need. Noting that Bundy suffered from severe
cataracts, Murray drove her to a Social Security office and had her
declared legally blind, bringing in $620 each month for Carol and her  
sons. Next, he took her to an optometrist, where she was fitted for
glasses, enabling her to discard her white cane. Enraptured, Carol began
deliberately clogging the toilets and drains in her apartment, anything
at all to bring the manager around. Soon they were lovers, but Murray
was married, refusing to give up his family. In October, Carol
approached his wife. offering $1,500 if the woman would disappear, but
the effort backfired, with Murray berating her, coldly suggesting she
find other lodgings.

Three months later, during January 1980, Carol was pining in the      
country-western bar when she met Douglas Clark, and he immediately swept
her off her feet. Clark moved into her home the same night, working by
day in the boiler room of a Burbank soap factory, devoting his nights to
a crash course in ecstasy that made Carol his virtual slave. She
swallowed her pride when he brought younger women home for sex,
dutifully snapping photographs on command. One of his conquests was an
eleven-year-old, picked up while roller skating in a nearby park, but
Carol made no complaint as kinky sex gave way to pedophilia,
increasingly spiced with discussions of death and mutilation.

On June 11, 1980, half-sisters Gina Narano, 15, and Cynthia Chandler,
16, vanished from Huntington Beach, en route to a meeting with friends.
They were found next morning, beside the Ventura Freeway near Griffith
Park, in Los Angeles; each had been shot in the side of the head with a
small-caliber pistol. At home, Clark gleefully confessed the murders to
Bundy, regaling her with details of how he had forced the girls to
fellate him, shooting each in the head as she brought him to climax.

In the predawn hours of June 24, Karen Jones, a 24-year-old hooker, was
found behind a Burbank steakhouse, murdered by a single gunshot to the 
head. Later that morning, police were summoned to Studio City, where   
another female victim -- this one headless -- had been found by
horrified pedestrians. Despite the missing head, she was identified as
Exxie Wilson, 20, another veteran streetwalker.

That afternoon, while Carol Bundy's sons were visiting relatives, Clark
surprised her by plucking a woman's head from the refrigerator, placing
it on the kitchen counter. He ordered Carol to make up the twisted face
with cosmetics, and she later recalled, "We had a lot of fun with her. I
was making her up like a Barbie with makeup." Tiring of the game, Clark
took his trophy to the bathroom, for a shower and a bout of necrophilic
oral sex. Newspaper headlines were already touting the crimes of a new
"Sunset Slayer" by June 27, when Exxie Wilson's head was found in a
Hollywood alley, stuffed inside an ornate wooden box. Authorities noted
that it had been thoroughly scrubbed before it was discarded by the
killer. Three days later, a group of snake hunters near Sylmar, in the
San Fernando Valley, turned up a woman's mummified corpse, identified as
Sacramento runaway Marnette Comer. Last seen alive on June 1, the
17-year-old prostitute had been dead at least three weeks when she was
found. Like other victims in the series, she was known to work the
Sunset Strip.

And the murders continued. On July 25, a young "Jane Doe" was found on 
Sunset Boulevard, killed by a shot to the head. Two weeks later, hikers
in the Fernwood area, near Malibu, turned up another unidentified
corpse, dismembered by predators, a small-caliber bullet hole visible in
the skull.

Despite her hot romance with Clark, Carol Bundy had continued visiting
John Murray at the country-western bar where he performed by night. She
did not hold her liquor well, and after dropping several hints about her
newest lover's criminal activities, she was appalled by Murray's comment
that he might report Doug Clark to the police. On August 5, she kept a
midnight rendezvous with Murray in his van, parked two blocks from the
bar, and she killed him there. Found four days later, the singer had
been stabbed nine times and slashed across the buttocks, his head
severed and missing from the murder scene.

It had become too much for Carol Bundy. Two days after Murray's body was
discovered, she broke down on the job, sobbing out to a fellow nurse, "I
can't take it anymore. I'm supposed to save lives, not take them." Her
friend tipped police and they called on Bundy at home, retrieving three
pairs of panties removed from victims as trophies, along with snapshots
of Clark and his eleven-year-old playmate. Arrested on the job in
Burbank, Clark was still in jail four days later, when police retrieved
a pistol from the boiler room. Ballistics tests would link the gun with
bullets recovered from five of the known "Sunset" victims.

At his trial, serving briefly as his own attorney, Clark blamed Carol
Bundy and John Murray for the slayings, contending that they had
patterned their crimes after the case of Theodore Bundy. Jurors saw
through the flimsy ruse, and on January 28, 1983, they convicted Clark
across the board, including six counts of first-degree murder with
"special circumstances," plus one count each of attempted murder,
mayhem, and mutilating human remains. Strutting before the jury during
the penalty phase of his case, Clark declared, "We have to vote for the
death penalty in this case. The evidence cries out for it." The        
panel agreed with his logic, and he was sentenced to death on February
15.

At her own trial, for murdering Murray and one of the unidentified
females, Carol Bundy first pled insanity , then reversed herself and
admitted the slayings. According to her statement, John Murray was shot
in the head, then decapitated to remove ballistic evidence. She had also
handed Clark the gun with which he shot an unnamed prostitute, found
dead along the Sunset Strip in July 1980. Convicted on the basis of her
own confession, Bundy received consecutive terms of 27 years to life on
one count, plus 25 years to life on the other.
--
Kathy E
"I can only please one person a day, today is NOT your day, and tomorrow
isn't looking too good for you either"
http://members.delphi.com/kathylaw/ Law & Issues Mailing List
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