Kathy E <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:


A native of Lowell, Oregon, Daniels was convicted of manslaughter in
1970, winning parole from his sentence in 1981. Within a year, he had
stopped checking in with his parole officer at Eugene, and new Oregon
warrants charged him with parole violation, passing bad checks , and
driving with a suspended license. Along the way, more serious charges
began to surface, making Daniels a suspect in at least six homicides and
two attempted murders.

The first to die, on December 10, 1981, were 60-year-old Harold Pratt
and his wife Betty, 55. The Tucson residents were camping out on
Arizona's desert, 75 miles southeast of Phoenix, when they were robbed
and shot in the back of the head, execution-style, their bodies left as
food for scavenging predators.

On June 25, 1982, 62-year-old Arthur Gray, Jr., was killed in similar
fashion at the Twin Springs Campground, 80 miles east of Eugene, Oregon.
The following month, Arizona residents Benjamin and Edith Shaffer, both
in their sixties, were robbed and shot to death in Mendocino County,
California, their bodies lying undiscovered through December 1983.
Ernest Corral, 38, was the victim for November 1982, shot
execution-style and dumped in a desert ravine near his hometown of
Apache Junction, Arizona.

There had also been survivors of the murder spree, with Edwin and Ida
Davis, both 64, reporting that they had befriended a younger couple near
El Cajon, California, in March of 1982. On March 22, Edwin and Ida were
overpowered by their "friends," injected with powerful horse
tranquilizer and left to die, but they were discovered in time for
physicians to save their lives. Recuperating from their ordeal, both
identified Robert Danielson, from mug shots, as one of their attackers.

On February 9, 1984, an all-points bulletin was issued on Danielson,   
accompanied by a federal warrant charging unlawful flight to avoid     
prosecution in Oregon. Formally charged in the Gray and Shaffer
homicides, he remained a suspect in several other cases while
investigations were continuing. Two months after federal warrants were
issued, on April 7, FBI agents traced Danielson to his job with a
traveling carnival, then playing in Odessa, Texas. He was arrested
without incident and returned to Oregon for trial, facing a maximum
sentence of life imprisonment in a state where the death penalty had
been abolished
--
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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