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Suspected Serial Killer Terrorizing South Carolina Town

Posted: Sun Jul 05, 2009 3:15 pm
by southerngale
My prayers go out to this community. Some are mourning the deaths of loved ones and others are afraid he's going to strike again. It's hard to imagine what they're going through. I hope they catch the scumbag soon.

15-year-old girl becomes fifth victim
She survived two days after being shot on Thursday

By CLEVE R. WOOTSON JR. - cwootson@charlotteobserver.com


GAFFNEY — A teenage girl on Saturday became the fifth victim of a suspected serial killer terrorizing this small S.C. town, further darkening a day planned for celebrations.

Abby Tyler, 15, died about 11:15 a.m. at a Spartanburg hospital after fighting for her life for two days, Cherokee County Coroner Dennis Fowler said.

She was wounded and her father was killed Thursday as they worked to close the family’s furniture and appliance store near downtown Gaffney.
Abby Tyler

Abby Tyler, 15, died about 11:15 a.m. at a Spartanburg hospital after fighting for her life for two days, Cherokee County Coroner Dennis Fowler said. Photo provided by the Gaffney Ledger.

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“A lot of (people) are bad scared. They’re keeping their doors locked,” said Ed Bolton, who sells fireworks from a trailer on S.C. 11 near Gaffney.

He said customers are subdued and more consumed with talk of the killings — and the killer at-large — than they were with July 4th festivities.

Investigators released few new details about the case Saturday, readying for a long night of responding to calls from people who mistake fireworks for the sound of gunshots.

Authorities told The Associated Press they can’t afford to let any lead in the case slip by.

“Every tip that comes in, we are sending out investigators and following any lead,” Gaffney Police Chief Rick Turner said at a news conference Saturday.

In addition to the Tylers, an 83-year-old mother and her daughter were shot to death Wednesday, and a 63-year-old peach farmer was found dead at his home a week ago.

County Sheriff Bill Blanton said investigators believe the killings are linked, and the search is on for a man is in his 40s, with salt and pepper hair, about 6-foot-2, and roughly 200 pounds.

Blanton said all the victims were shot, but he would not say how the deaths were linked. The shootings all occurred within about 10 miles of each other.

On Saturday, police cruisers filled the streets, as officers from across the state descended on the rural county of 54,000 people set amid peach orchards and farms.

Police set up checkpoints throughout the county and stopped any vehicle that looked remotely like the silver 1991 to 1994 model Ford Explorer that authorities believe the killer is driving.

Hundreds of officers are on the case, working as hard as they can even though they are physically drained, Turner told the AP.

“Some have been out here for well over 24, 48 hours, maybe even longer than that, with very little cat naps here and there,” Turner said.

Some residents canceled Independence Day holiday plans, and some were arming themselves. The sheriff has warned door-to-door salesmen to stop knocking and anyone who breaks down on the county’s rural roads to wait instead of walking to a house for help because he worries “people are going to start shooting at shadows.”

Wendy Phillips was afraid to go to work Saturday at Hardees, where she works the counter. When she got there, she was greeted by a poster on the door with a sketch of the killer, offering a reward.

“When I came to work I was a nervous wreck. I was shaking,” said Phillips, 33, who had been an elementary school student of Gena Parker, one of the killer’s victim.

Phillips wondered if she had served the man food — and worried that she still might.

The killings began a week ago Saturday when the wife of 63-year-old peach farmer Kline Cash found him dead in their home. Then last Wednesday, relatives found 83-year-old Hazel Linder and her 50-year-old daughter, Gena Linder Parker, bound and shot to death in a separate shooting at Linder’s home.

Dozens of local, state and federal investigators were assigned to the case. But a day later, the killer struck again, less than a half-mile from the sheriff’s office serving as the headquarters for the investigation, killing 48-year-old Stephen Tyler and mortally wounding his daughter.

Abby Tyler’s death heightened the mourning in Cherokee County. She would have been a junior at Gaffney High School.

Friends and relatives gathered Saturday at the Tylers’ home, a brick ranch in an affluent section east of Gaffney.

“The family is hurting,” said Ashley Wilson, 20, an acquaintance of Abby’s.

She described Abby as a nice girl: “She went to church and everything. She had a good life.”

The killings have also sparked anger. One man said he had a surprise for the killer: “It’s got a bang but it’s not a firecracker.”

Mostly though, people just want the killer caught.

“We’re knee-deep in the investigation,” Blanton said. “There’s fear and concern here and there should be concern.”

The Associated Press contributed. Wootson is a staff writer for the Charlotte Observer.




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Posted: Sun Jul 05, 2009 9:42 pm
by wx247
This is so sad and horrific. I hope the individual responsible for this madness is caught and brought to justice!!

Re: Suspected Serial Killer Terrorizing South Carolina Town

Posted: Mon Jul 06, 2009 5:52 pm
by lurkey
Confirmed. NC police identified a dead burglar suspect as the SC serial killer.

http://www.wral.com/news/state/story/5514087/
SC cops check serial killer link to slain NC man

By MITCH WEISS
Associated Press Writer
Posted: 38 minutes ago

GASTONIA, N.C. — A man matching the description of a suspected serial killer was shot to death by North Carolina police early Monday, witnesses said, and South Carolina authorities were on the scene investigating.

Authorities didn't immediately say if the man killed was linked to five deaths in South Carolina last week, but a sport utility vehicle similar to the one police think the serial killer may have been driving was at the scene of the North Carolina shooting.

South Carolina State Law Enforcement Division spokeswoman Jennifer Timmons said agents traveled to Gastonia after a burglary suspect was shot about 3 a.m. The shooting happened about 30 miles north of Gaffney, S.C., a city terrorized by a suspected serial killer.
The slain man first gave a fake name to officers and then pulled a gun on them when they tried to arrest him on a warrant from Lincoln County, N.C., authorities said.
The suspect was killed and an officer was shot in the foot, but is expected to recover, police said. The suspect's name has not been released.
Police came to the home near Gastonia after getting a call about a suspicious SUV
pulling into a usually vacant home. The SUV matched the champagne-colored Ford police have said the suspected serial killer might have been driving.
The neighbors who called police, Mike and Terri Valentine, were on edge because Gaffney was just a short drive away.

They watched two people that sometime visit the home get out of the vehicle, followed by a third man who matched the description authorities have given for the serial killer. The man appeared to be very intoxicated, Mike Valentine said.

When officers went inside the home, Terri Valentine said she heard someone yell "put it down" and heard a gunshot.

Then "bam, bam, bam, bam. Next thing I know, all of Gaston County was here," she said.
Gaston County police said the other two people were in custody, but didn't indicate whether they were facing any charges.

The killing spree in Gaffney occurred in a 10-mile area over six days. A peach farmer was killed June 27, an 83-year-old woman and her daughter were found bound and shot four days later and the next day a father and his teen daughter were shot in their family's furniture store.

People throughout the northwestern South Carolina region have armed themselves, locked their doors and reported anything suspicious.

Cherokee County Sheriff Bill Blanton has said physical evidence linked the five killings in this 54,000-person county known for mills and peach orchards, but he has not elaborated.
Investigators won't give a motive for the killings. They said they haven't determined if the killer knew any of the victims or whether anything linked the five people killed.

"He's just a cold-blooded murderer," Blanton told ABC's "Good Morning America on Monday. "He's ruined the lives of these three families and has torn our community up. But folks are dealing with it and dealing with it well."

Posted: Mon Jul 06, 2009 5:56 pm
by DESTRUCTION5
Justice was served this time.

Posted: Mon Jul 06, 2009 6:24 pm
by CajunMama
What a relief for the people of the area. I can't imagine how terrorized they felt.

Re:

Posted: Mon Jul 06, 2009 6:42 pm
by Stephanie
DESTRUCTION5 wrote:Justice was served this time.


Yep. I'm so glad that this is over for those poor people. May the victims rest in peace.

Re: Suspected Serial Killer Terrorizing South Carolina Town

Posted: Mon Jul 06, 2009 9:18 pm
by HURAKAN
US serial killer 'shot by police'

A gunman who has shot five people dead in South Carolina has been killed in a shootout in North Carolina, police say.

Police named the gunman as 41-year-old Patrick Tracy Burris, identified as the killer after bullets found in his gun matched those of the wanted gunman.

Officials in Cherokee County, where five people were killed around the town of Gaffney, gave few details.

But they said intensive police efforts had paid off, adding they wanted to tell residents they could sleep safely.

"We have him. He's our serial killer," said Neil Dolan, deputy state law enforcement director in South Carolina.

The shootout took place near Gastonia, North Carolina, after police challenged a suspect in a burglary.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/a ... 137496.stm

Re:

Posted: Tue Jul 07, 2009 9:27 am
by Category 5
DESTRUCTION5 wrote:Justice was served this time.


Yep, too bad he didnt suffer though.

Re: Suspected Serial Killer Terrorizing South Carolina Town

Posted: Tue Jul 07, 2009 9:33 am
by lurkey
Suspected serial killer recently paroled in N.C.
By MITCH WEISS
Associated Press Writer

Posted: Today at 4:13 a.m.
Updated: Today at 5:45 a.m.

Gaffney, S.C. — People terrorized by a serial killer who shot five people to death in their small community were relieved after police said they killed the man responsible. But with his death, an answer to the bloody spree could be lost.

"I still want to know why he did it," said truck driver Matt Brown, 55, of Gaffney. "Why he killed so many innocent people. I guess we'll never know."

His wife, Gina, 53, clutched her husband's arm. "Thank God it's over," she said. "We spent a lot of sleepless nights wondering who was next."

Suspected killer Patrick Burris, 41, was a career criminal paroled in North Carolina just two months ago, authorities said. He was shot to death by officers investigating a burglary complaint at a home in Gastonia, N.C., 30 miles from where the killing spree started June 27.

Investigators did not have an address for Burris and said they had no idea why he did it.

"He was unpredictable. He was scary. He was weird," said Neil Dolan, deputy director of the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division.

Ballistics tests showed Burris's gun matched the one that killed residents in and around Gaffney over six days last week, SLED Chief Reggie Lloyd said.

Burris had a long rap sheet filled with convictions for larceny, forgery and breaking and entering in states across the Southeast, including Florida, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland and North Carolina. He had been paroled from a North Carolina prison in April after serving almost eight years.

He was convicted of a robbery in Alamance County in the 1990s.

"Look at this," Lloyd said, waving a stapled copy of Burris' criminal record. "This is like 25 pages. At some point the criminal justice system is going to need to explain why this suspect was out on the street."

Gaffney farmer Sam Howell, 61, was among dozens of people from Cherokee County at the news conference where authorities identified Burris.

"My prayers were answered. He got what he deserved," Howell said. "He scared the hell out of everyone. I guess we can feel better but we've lost some of our innocence."

People who normally kept their doors open and welcomed strangers stopped trusting their own neighbors.

Gina Brown said she spent many sleepless nights worried about her family's safety. She called the couple's four adult children, who still live in the area, every night to tell them she loved them and make sure they were safe.

"They thought I was crazy, but they understood," she said.

The mystery ended in Gastonia early Monday after Mike and Terri Valentine called police to report a suspicious sport utility vehicle in their neighborhood.

The Valentines were on edge because the Gaffney serial killer was just a short drive away.

They watched two people who sometimes visit the neighboring home get out of the vehicle, followed by a third man who matched the description of the killer: tall, heavyset, unshaven and wearing a baseball cap. The man appeared to be very drunk, Mike Valentine said.

When officers arrived and went inside, Terri Valentine said she heard someone yell "put it down" and heard a gunshot.

Then "bam, bam, bam, bam. Next thing I know, all of Gaston County was here," she said.

Gaston County police said the other two people were in custody, but did not indicate whether they were facing charges.

The Gaffney killings happened in a 10-mile area over six days. Peach farmer Kline Cash, 63, was killed June 27 and 83-year-old Hazel Linder and her daughter, 50-year-old Gena Linder Parker, were found bound and shot in the older woman's home four days later. The next day, Stephen Tyler and his 15-year-old daughter Abby were found shot in their family's furniture store.

The investigation isn't over, and Cherokee County Sheriff Bill Blanton said investigators will trace the suspect's recent activities and trying to figure out if he has killed other people in other places.

"Now we have someone we can focus on," Blanton said.

He said he hoped the resolution calmed the fears of 54,000 people in the county 50 miles west of Charlotte, N.C., known for its peach orchards and mills.

"We feel the victims' pain," Blanton said. "This isn't over. We're just changing gears."

Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Re: Suspected Serial Killer Terrorizing South Carolina Town

Posted: Tue Jul 07, 2009 12:05 pm
by Ptarmigan
Adios cucarahca! :grrr: