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Home / World

'I-65 Killer' who terrorised motel clerks in the 1980s is identified

By Neil Vigdor
New York Times·
6 Apr, 2022 01:29 AM6 mins to read

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Sergeant Glen Fifield of the Indiana State Police at the announcement of a suspect in the "I-65 Killer" murders. Photo / AP

Sergeant Glen Fifield of the Indiana State Police at the announcement of a suspect in the "I-65 Killer" murders. Photo / AP

The authorities said they connected Harry Edward Greenwell, who died in 2013, to at least three murders in Kentucky and Indiana, using genetic genealogy.

His chosen conduit for terror was Interstate 65, preying on women working as night clerks at motels along the highway.

For more than three decades, the serial killer evaded authorities, who say he was responsible for at least three murders and a separate sexual assault in Kentucky and Indiana during the late 1980s and in 1990.

Investigators now say that they have discovered the identity of the man known as the I-65 Killer, and that he died in 2013 at age 68.

At a news conference Tuesday in Indianapolis, authorities said that the killings were committed by Harry Edward Greenwell, who had served at least two prison sentences, in Iowa and Kentucky, for a string of violent crimes.

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The breakthrough in the case was reached when genetic genealogy was used to match Greenwell's DNA to ancestry records, according to investigators, who declined to elaborate on those findings.

Law enforcement officials said there was a distinct possibility that Greenwell was responsible for additional murders, rapes and robberies in the Midwest, which are being actively investigated.

"I hope that today might bring a little bit of solace to you, to know that the animal that did this is no longer on this Earth," Douglas G. Carter, the superintendent of the Indiana State Police, told the victims' relatives at the news conference.

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Carter said that advances in DNA analysis and the dogged work of investigators should give other criminals pause.

"The message is: You might be able to hide for a while, but we're going to find you, even if you're not here," he said.

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Three of the victims were sexually assaulted and shot. The motels, one in Kentucky and two in Indiana, were just off Interstate 65, a north-south highway that extends from Gary, Indiana, to Mobile, Alabama.

In the early morning hours of February 21, 1987, police discovered the body of Vicki Heath, 42, behind a Super 8 motel in Elizabethtown, Kentucky, The Courier-Journal of Louisville reported at the time. A guest had alerted the authorities that the motel's clerk was missing.

More than two years later, and about 480km north, investigators say, the killer struck again — twice in a matter of hours.

Images of Margaret Gill, Jeanne Gilbert and Vicki Heath were displayed as their family members listened as the Indiana State Police announced the identity of the suspect in their killings. Photo / AP
Images of Margaret Gill, Jeanne Gilbert and Vicki Heath were displayed as their family members listened as the Indiana State Police announced the identity of the suspect in their killings. Photo / AP

A worker at the Days Inn in Merrillville, Indiana, had found the body of the night clerk, Margaret Gill, 24, in a vacant wing of the motel on March 3, 1989, according to news reports at the time.

About 2 1/2 hours later, Jeanne Gilbert, 34, was abducted at gunpoint from a Days Inn in Remington, Indiana, according to published reports. Her body was found in a ditch about 15 miles away on a road near a farm.

"In our case, we'll never know what the killer was thinking," Kimberly Gilbert Wright, Gilbert's daughter, said Tuesday during the news conference. "We'll never learn any of the whys of his actions, and that's just where we sit today."

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Wright thanked investigators for bringing the serial killer "out of the dark and into the light."

"For some of us, no closure has ever taken place, and the horrors are lived on a daily basis," she said.

About US$426 had been stolen from the two motels in Indiana, which were about 45 minutes apart.

But with no witnesses to give a description of a killer, the investigation remained cold.

Then in January 1990, a 21-year-old clerk at Days Inn in Columbus, Indiana, about 70km southeast of Indianapolis, told authorities that she had been raped at knifepoint in a motel robbery that fit the pattern of the previous attacks, authorities said.

The clerk was able to give investigators a description of her attacker, who she said had thrown coffee in her face. A sketch of the attacker, a bearded man in his late 30s to mid-40s with greenish eyes and a knit cap, was developed based on the clerk's description.

The rendering led to dozens of leads and several potential suspects, but their DNA did not connect them to the murders, which authorities more than two decades later had determined to be the work of a serial killer.

Greenwell, who was born in Kentucky and was in his 40s when the murders took place, had an extensive criminal past, authorities said.

A timeline provided by the FBI on Tuesday showed that he was arrested on armed robbery and sodomy charges in Kentucky in 1963 and 1965. He was paroled from the Kentucky State Penitentiary in 1969.

In 1982, he was arrested on burglary charges in Iowa, where he twice escaped from custody and was recaptured. That same year, he was sentenced to prison in Iowa, but was released in 1983. He died of cancer in Iowa in 2013, law enforcement officials said Tuesday, citing Greenwell's obituary.

The breakthrough in identifying the so-called I-65 Killer adds to the list of cold cases that have been solved as a result of genetic genealogy. The process, which involves crosschecking DNA evidence with ancestry records, has been instrumental in identifying dozens of suspects in languishing cold cases, most notably the so-called Golden State Killer in California.

Investigators said that they had preserved a wealth of evidence from each of the crime scenes in Kentucky and Indiana that included DNA, ballistics, hair and clothing fibres. In 2019, an FBI task force became involved in the case, which is when efforts focused on using genetic genealogy to identify the serial killer, said Herbert J. Stapleton, the special agent in charge of the FBI's Indianapolis field office.

"I know that this announcement can't take away the pain that you felt at this loss," Stapleton said. "But what we hope is that through today's information and revelation, this provides some answers that may aid you in your healing process that you go through every single day and bring you some sense of peace."

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.


Written by: Neil Vigdor
© 2022 THE NEW YORK TIMES

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