Suspect in 'Golden State Killer' case
makes court appearance in wheelchair
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[April 28, 2018]
By Fred Greaves
SACRAMENTO (Reuters) - An ex-policeman
charged with murder in connection with a string of rapes and killings
across California attributed to the "Golden State Killer" made a brief
initial court appearance on Friday, sitting in a wheelchair and speaking
in a hoarse voice.
Joseph James DeAngelo, 72, who was arrested this week at his home in the
Sacramento suburb of Citrus Heights, was formally apprised of two of the
eight murder counts against him and ordered back to court on May 14.
DeAngelo, wearing orange jail garb and shackled to a wheelchair, spoke
only a few words to acknowledge that he understood the charges and that
he was being represented by a public defender.
He was largely inexpressive during the brief hearing, appearing to
squint to see the judge across the courtroom and speaking haltingly in a
barely audible rasp.
The former police officer and divorced father of three has so far been
charged with eight counts of murder blamed on the Golden State Killer,
crimes that sprawled from Sacramento all the way to Southern California,
including two in Sacramento County, two in Ventura County and four in
Orange County.
He is suspected in a dozen slayings as well as 45 rapes and more than
120 burglaries in 10 California counties, a decade-long crime spree
considered one of the most prolific in state history.
DeAngelo was in court on Friday only on the two murder charges filed
against him in Sacramento County, for the Feb. 2, 1978 slayings of Brian
Maggiore, 21, and his wife Katie, 20.
Investigators finally cracked the case, which has long haunted victims'
families and law enforcement, by comparing crime scene DNA to genetic
information on commercial genealogy websites that consumers use to
explore their ancestry.
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Joseph James DeAngelo, 72, who authorities said was identified by
DNA evidence as the serial predator dubbed the Golden State Killer,
appears at his arraignment in California Superior court in
Sacramento, California, U.S., April 27, 2018. Sacramento Bee/Randy
Pench/Pool via REUTERS
Detectives followed the family trees of close matches, seeking
people who might be the killer. The process produced a promising
lead a week ago, when the DNA of a relative pointed to DeAngelo
based on his age and the fact that he lived near where the attacks
occurred.
DeAngelo was identified as a suspect about two months after the case
gained renewed attention in the book “I’ll Be Gone in the Dark,” by
journalist Michelle McNamara, who died in 2016.
Investigators found DeAngelo, placed him under surveillance and
obtained his DNA from a discarded object, finding a match to the
crime scene samples.
In addition to being known as the Golden State Killer the unknown
suspect was also dubbed the “East Area Rapist” and the “Original
Night Stalker,” at various times.
DeAngelo was a police officer in two small California communities -
Exeter and Auburn - during the 1970s. He was fired from the Auburn
force in 1979 after being accused of shoplifting.
(Writing by and additional reporting by Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles;
Editing by Leslie Adler and James Dalgleish)
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