By ANDREW GUMBEL in Los Angeles
The mystery of the Green River Killer, responsible for the longest string of serial killings in US history, appeared to be resolved once and for all yesterday after 54-year-old Gary Ridgway pleaded guilty to the murder of 48 young women in and around the Seattle suburbs over the past 20 years.
Ridgway, a painter at a trucking company described by co-workers as quiet but seemingly blameless, made his plea as part of a deal with prosecutors, who have promised to spare him the death penalty in exchange for his continuing co-operation. He will almost certainly be sentenced to life imprisonment with no parole.
He stands accused of abducting, mutilating and dumping the bodies of young prostitutes, drug addicts and runaways in and around the Green River, which runs just south of the Seattle-Tacoma airport.
The case baffled detectives for years, who always seemed on the verge of a major breakthrough, but never quite managed to assemble sufficient evidence to make an arrest.
Ridgway himself was a suspect as early as 1983, a year after the first half-dozen bodies popped up in the river, but the case against him remained largely circumstantial until the development of DNA testing enabled prosecutors to tie the killings to a sample of saliva he had given them in 1987.
He was arrested two years ago and initially signalled his intent to plead not guilty. With the threat of the death penalty hanging over him, however, he slowly began to co-operate with his captors and allowed them to increase the number of murders associated with him from the seven for which he was originally arrested to yesterday's tally of 48.
Although most of the killings took place in the early 1980s, the most recent case dated back only to 1998. As many as 30 women remain unaccounted for, and there are suspicions that prostitutes who vanished from British Columbia, across the Canadian border, might also have fallen victim to the Green River Killer.
Two of the murders Ridgway confessed to took place in Oregon, where the death penalty could still be applied should he ever be extradited. Under his plea deal, he has agreed to continue co-operating with investigators for another six months.
The murders were as sordid as they were gruesome, focussed almost entirely on women who frequented the "Strip", a stretch of the Pacific Coast Highway near the airport dotted with by-the-hour fleapit motels. (It has since been cleaned up.)
Many of the women showed signs of sexual assault. Some were strangled with their own knotted panties and dumped with stones shoved inside them. One, 22-year-old Carol Christensen, was found with dead trout on her face and chest, a pile of sausages in her hand and an empty bottle of Lambrusco in between her legs.
Ridgway entered the investigation after the father and boyfriend of one of the victims, 17-year-old Marie Malvar, tracked down the truck that had picked her up and subsequently found it parked in the drive of Ridgway's home.
At first, investigators were not interested, but they came back to him in 1987 when they realised he had links to three of the murdered women, had a history of frequenting prostitutes, including one who accused him of trying to strangle her, and was never at work when the murders took place.
Since his arrest, the evidence has slowly piled up. At his old homes police found a hidden bone and tufts of human hair. His ex-wife testified that he kept rolls of thick plastic sheeting in his pick-up and that he often came home wet and dirty.
- INDEPENDENT
Seattle serial killer admits to 48 murders
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