Federal officials said they used DNA evidence to determine that
Walter Leo Jackson Senior, who died in prison in 2018, killed
24-year-old Julie Williams and 26-year-old Lollie Winans near
their campsite in southwest Virginia shortly after the couple
was last seen on May 24, 1996. The women's bodies were found a
week later.
U.S. Attorney Christopher Kavanaugh told reporters on Thursday
that authorities saw no indication that Jackson targeted the
women because of their sexual orientation.
Winans and Williams were in a romantic relationship.
"This crime was definitionally hateful," Kavanaugh said.
"Nevertheless, we do not have any evidence ... that Jackson had
any knowledge of or was otherwise motivated by their membership
in a protected class."
Jackson's criminal history included kidnapping, rapes and
assaults, and he served at least four prison sentences,
officials said.
In 2014, while serving a prison sentence for a separate crime,
Jackson was forensically linked to two rapes that occurred in
Cuyahoga County, Ohio in June and July 1996, just weeks after
Winans and Williams were killed, Kavanaugh said. The FBI
described him as an avid hiker and frequenter of Shenandoah
National Park.
A federal grand jury previously indicted Darrell David Rice for
the murders in 2002, alleging that he had a history of anti-gay
sentiment and had targeted the women because they were in a
romantic relationship. The case was dismissed when DNA evidence
from the case showed no link to Rice.
FBI Special Agent-in-Charge Stanley Meador told reporters that a
new team of investigators had taken on the case in 2021. With
funding from the Department of Justice's sexual-assault-kit
initiative, the team submitted crime-scene evidence to a lab
that was able to obtain DNA from the items, which Meador
declined to describe.
The DNA sample matched almost exactly a sample Jackson had given
during a prior arrest, and the findings indicated that both
women had been sexually assaulted, Meador said.
"There was a one-out-of-2.6-trillion chance that it originated
from someone other than Walter Leo Jackson," Kavanaugh said.
"I've prosecuted many homicides and cold cases and I have never
witnessed statistics that high."
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter; Editing by Rod Nickel)
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