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Lawrence Bittaker and Roy Norris








Lawrence Bittaker and Roy Norris


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Lawrence Bittaker

Lawrence Sigmund Bittaker trial 1981.jpg
Bittaker on trial in 1981

Born
Lawrence Sigmund Bittaker
(1940-09-27) September 27, 1940 (age 77)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Criminal penalty
Death

Conviction(s)
First-degree murder, kidnapping, rape[1]
Details
Victims
5
Span of crimes

June 24 – October 31, 1979
State(s)
California
Location(s)
San Gabriel Mountains, Sunland-Tujunga
Date apprehended

November 20, 1979
Imprisoned at
San Quentin State Prison



















Roy Norris

Roy Lewis Norris California 1979.jpg
Norris shortly before his arrest in 1979

Born
Roy Lewis Norris
(1948-02-05) February 5, 1948 (age 70)
Greeley, Colorado, U.S.
Criminal penalty
Life imprisonment with parole eligibility from 2010

Conviction(s)
First- and second-degree murder, kidnapping, rape, robbery[2][3]
Details
Victims
5
Span of crimes

June 24 – October 31, 1979
State(s)
California
Location(s)
San Gabriel Mountains, Sunland-Tujunga
Date apprehended

November 20, 1979
Imprisoned at
Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility

Lawrence Sigmund Bittaker (born September 27, 1940) and Roy Lewis Norris (born February 5, 1948), also known as the Tool Box Killers, are American serial killers and rapists who kidnapped, raped, tortured, and killed five teenage girls in Southern California over a period of five months in 1979.


Described by FBI Special Agent John E. Douglas as the most disturbing individual for whom he has ever created a criminal profile,[4]:135 Bittaker was sentenced to death for five murders on March 24, 1981, and is currently on death row at San Quentin State Prison.[5][6]


Norris accepted a plea bargain whereby he agreed to testify against Bittaker and was sentenced to life imprisonment on May 7, 1980, with possibility of parole after serving 30 years. He is currently incarcerated at Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility.[7]


Bittaker and Norris became known as the "Tool Box Killers" due to the fact the majority of instruments used to torture and murder their victims, such as pliers, ice picks, and sledgehammers, were items normally stored inside a household toolbox.[8]




Contents





  • 1 Early life

    • 1.1 Lawrence Bittaker


    • 1.2 Roy Norris



  • 2 First offenses

    • 2.1 Bittaker


    • 2.2 Norris



  • 3 Acquaintance


  • 4 Murders

    • 4.1 Lucinda Lynn Schaefer


    • 4.2 Andrea Joy Hall


    • 4.3 Jackie Doris Gilliam and Jacqueline Leah Lamp


    • 4.4 Shirley Lynette Ledford



  • 5 Investigation


  • 6 Arrest

    • 6.1 Confession


    • 6.2 Search of San Gabriel Mountains



  • 7 Guilty plea

    • 7.1 Arraignment



  • 8 Trial

    • 8.1 Imprisonment and appeals



  • 9 Aftermath


  • 10 Media

    • 10.1 Film


    • 10.2 Bibliography


    • 10.3 Television



  • 11 See also


  • 12 References

    • 12.1 Notes



  • 13 Cited works and further reading


  • 14 External links




Early life[edit]



Lawrence Bittaker[edit]


Lawrence Sigmund Bittaker was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on September 27, 1940, as the unwanted child of a couple who had chosen to not have children.[9]:84 Bittaker was placed in an orphanage by his natural mother and was adopted by Mr. and Mrs. George Bittaker as an infant. Bittaker's adoptive father worked in the aviation industry, which required the family to frequently move around the United States throughout his childhood.[10]


Bittaker was first arrested for shoplifting at the age of 12 and obtained a minor criminal record over the next four years after further arrests for the same offense—in addition to petty theft—which brought him to the attention of juvenile authorities. Bittaker would later claim these numerous theft-related offenses committed throughout his adolescence had been attempts to compensate for the lack of love he received from his parents.[11]:250


Although reported to have an IQ of 138, Bittaker considered school a tedious experience and dropped out of high school in 1957.[9]:257 By this stage in his adolescence, he and his adoptive parents were living in California. Within a year of dropping out, he had been arrested for car theft, a hit and run, and evading arrest.[11]:250 For these offenses he was imprisoned at the California Youth Authority, where he remained until he was 18 years old.[11]:250 Upon release, Bittaker discovered his adoptive parents had disowned him and had relocated to another state. He would never see his adoptive parents again.[11]:250[9]:84



Roy Norris[edit]


Roy Lewis Norris was born in Greeley, Colorado, on February 5, 1948.[9]:74 Norris was conceived out of wedlock; his parents had married to avoid the social stigma surrounding illegitimate birth at the time.[9]:74–77


Norris' family lived within a short distance of his parents' home due to his grandfather's real estate investments.[9]:74 His father worked in a scrapyard and his mother was a drug-addicted housewife. He occasionally lived with his parents throughout his childhood and adolescence but was repeatedly placed in the care of foster families throughout the state of Colorado.[4]:136


Norris' childhood recollections are interspersed with memories of wrongful accusations while living with his biological parents, and being neglected by many of the foster families he lived with, frequently being denied sufficient food or clothing. He also claims he was sexually abused when in the care of a Hispanic family and later went on to state that this is where his prejudice towards Hispanics originates from.[4]:136


While living with his birth parents at the age of 16, Norris visited the home of a female relative who was in her early twenties and began talking sexually suggestive to her. She ordered him to leave her house and informed Norris' father, who threatened to subject him to a beating. Norris subsequently stole his father's car and drove into the Rocky Mountains, where he attempted to commit suicide by injecting pure air into an artery in his arm.[9]:76 He was later apprehended as a runaway, and returned to live with his parents. Upon his return home, Norris's parents informed him that he and his younger sister were unwanted children and that they intended to divorce when both reached adolescence.[12]


A year later Norris dropped out of school and joined the United States Navy. He was stationed in San Diego in 1965 and was deployed to Vietnam in 1969, although he did not see active combat during his four-month tour of duty.[11]:253 While stationed in Vietnam, he experimented with heroin and marijuana, becoming a regular user of the latter. He was honorably discharged from the Navy after one tour of duty.[13]



First offenses[edit]



Bittaker[edit]


Within days of his parole from the California Youth Authority, Bittaker was arrested for transporting a stolen vehicle across state lines.[11]:250 In August 1959, Bittaker was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment, to be served in the Oklahoma State Reformatory. He was later transferred to the medical center for federal prisoners in Springfield, Missouri, to serve the remainder of his sentence.[11]:250-251


In 1960, Bittaker was released from prison and soon reverted to crime. Within months of his release, he had been arrested in Los Angeles for robbery and, in May 1961, was sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment. While incarcerated for this robbery, he was diagnosed by a psychiatrist as being highly manipulative. The psychiatrist also described Bittaker as "having considerable concealed hostility."[11]:251


Bittaker was released on parole in 1963 after completing two years of his sentence. In October 1964, he was again imprisoned for parole violation. In 1966, Bittaker underwent further examinations by two independent psychiatrists, both of whom classified him as a borderline psychopath: a highly manipulative individual unable to acknowledge the consequences of his actions.[11]:251–252 Bittaker explained to one of them that his criminal activities gave him a feeling of self-importance, although he insisted circumstantial matters pertaining to his environment and upbringing decreased his ability to resist committing crimes. Bittaker was prescribed anti-psychotic medication. A year later, he was again released into society.[11]:251–252


A month after his parole in July 1967, Bittaker was again arrested and convicted of theft and of leaving the scene of an accident. He was sentenced to five years but was released in April 1970. In March 1971, Bittaker was again arrested for burglary. Due to repeated parole violations, he was sentenced to 6 months to 15 years' imprisonment in October 1971.[11]:251 Three years Bittaker had again been released from prison.


In 1974, Bittaker was arrested for assault with attempt to commit murder, after he stabbed a young supermarket employee who had accused him of stealing. The supermarket employee had observed Bittaker stealing a steak and had followed Bittaker outside and into the store's parking lot, where he calmly asked Bittaker whether he had forgotten to pay. Bittaker responded by stabbing his pursuer in the chest, narrowly missing his heart. He attempted to flee but was quickly restrained by two other supermarket employees.[14] The employee, Gary Louie, survived the stabbing, and Bittaker was convicted of the lesser charge of assault with a deadly weapon[15] and sent to California Men's Colony in San Luis Obispo.[11]:252



Norris[edit]


In November 1969, Roy Norris was arrested for his first known sexual offenses: he was charged with both rape and assault with attempt to commit rape.[11]:253 In the latter incident, he had attempted to force his way into the car of a lone woman. Three months later, in February 1970, Norris attempted to deceive a lone woman into allowing him to enter her home. When the woman refused, he attempted to break into her house; the woman phoned the police, who arrested Norris before he had the opportunity to cause the woman any harm.


Less than three months after this offense, Norris was diagnosed by military psychologists with a severe schizoid personality.[11]:253[16] He was given an administrative discharge from the Navy under terms labeled as psychological problems.[11]:267[16]


In May 1970, Norris—on bail for his latest offense—attacked a female student whom he had been stalking on the grounds of the San Diego State University campus. Norris repeatedly struck her on the back of the head with a rock until she slumped to her knees before he repeatedly beat her head against the sidewalk as he knelt upon her lower back. Shortly thereafter, Norris was charged with assault with a deadly weapon; he was committed to a total of five years' imprisonment at the Atascadero State Hospital, where he was classified as a mentally disordered sex offender.[17]


Norris was released from the Atascadero State Hospital in 1975, with five years' probation, having been declared by doctors as an individual who was of "no further danger to others".[11]:254[16] Just three months after his release, Norris approached a 27-year-old woman walking home from a restaurant in Redondo Beach and offered her a ride on his motorcycle. When she declined, Norris parked his motorcycle and grabbed the woman's scarf, twisting it around her neck, before informing her he intended to rape her[11]:254 and dragging her into nearby bushes. Fearing for her life, the woman did not resist the rape.


Although the rape was reported to police, they were initially unable to find the perpetrator. However, one month later, the victim observed Norris' motorcycle and noted the license number, which she immediately gave to police. Norris was arrested for the rape; one year later, he was tried and convicted for this offense[11]:264 and sent to the California Men's Colony in San Luis Obispo. While incarcerated at the California Men's Colony, Norris met and befriended Lawrence Bittaker.[18]:44



Acquaintance[edit]





California Men's Colony, where Bittaker and Norris first became acquainted; discovering a common interest in sexual violence.


Bittaker and Norris initially became loosely acquainted in 1977, one year after Norris arrived at San Luis Obispo. Bittaker's initial impression of Norris upon his arrival at the California Men's Colony was that he was a savvy individual, who largely associated with hardened criminals from motorcycle gangs, in addition to dealing in contraband drugs.[18]:44 The pair gradually became more closely acquainted, and only began talking in friendly terms when Norris taught Bittaker how to construct jewelry.[18]:44


According to Norris, Bittaker saved him from being attacked by fellow inmates on at least two occasions. By 1978,[11]:253 the pair had become close acquaintances; discovering they shared a common interest in sexual violence and misogyny, with Norris also divulging to Bittaker the biggest stimulation for him was of seeing frightened young women, adding this was the primary reason he had amassed a lengthy record for sexual offenses.[18]:42 Bittaker—who is not known to have committed any sexual offenses prior to his meeting Norris—himself divulged to Norris that if he ever raped a woman, he would kill her so as not to leave a witness to the crime.[11]:254


When alone, the pair regularly discussed plans to assault and murder teenage girls once they were freed. This shared fantasy evolved into an elaborate plan to murder one girl of each teenage year from 13 through 19.[16] The pair vowed to become reacquainted once they were released.


Bittaker was released from the California Men's Colony on October 15, 1978; he returned to Los Angeles and found work as a skilled machinist. This work earned Bittaker close to $1,000 a week, and despite classifying himself as a loner, he became friendly with several people in his neighborhood,[18]:44 earning a reputation as a generous and helpful individual who occasionally donated money to The Salvation Army.[9]:85 On one occasion, he is known to have purchased large quantities of fast food and wine which he then handed to homeless individuals in Downtown Los Angeles.[9]:85


Bittaker was particularly popular amongst the local teenagers, and later admitted the primary reason he always had beer and marijuana in his Burbank motel was that his residence would remain a popular place for teenagers to socialize.


Three months after Bittaker was released from the California Men's Colony, on January 15, 1979, Norris was released from prison and moved into his mother's home in Redondo Beach. He soon found employment as an electrician in Compton.[9]:85 Shortly thereafter, he received a letter from Bittaker.[11]:255 In late February, the pair met at a hotel and rekindled their plan to kidnap and rape girls.


In order for the pair to be able to successfully abduct teenage girls, Bittaker decided they would need a van as opposed to a car. With financial assistance from Norris,[4]:136 Bittaker purchased a silver 1977 GMC cargo van in February 1979. The vehicle was windowless on the sides and had a large passenger-side sliding door. According to Bittaker, when viewing this sliding door, he realized he or Norris could "pull up [to a teenage girl] real close and not have to open the doors all the way."[11]:255 Bittaker and Norris would nickname this van "Murder Mac".[19]



Murders[edit]


From February to June 1979, Bittaker and Norris picked up over 20 female hitchhikers. The pair did not assault these girls in any manner: these practice runs were merely a way for them to develop ruses to lure girls into the van voluntarily and of discovering secluded locations. In late April, the pair discovered a secluded fire road located in the San Gabriel Mountains. Bittaker broke the locked gate to this fire road with a crowbar and replaced the lock with one he owned.



Lucinda Lynn Schaefer[edit]


Bittaker and Norris killed their first victim, 16-year-old Lucinda Lynn Schaefer, on June 24, 1979.[20] Schaefer was last seen leaving a Presbyterian Church meeting in Redondo Beach. In his written accounts of the events of this day, Bittaker stated he and Norris first finished constructing the bed the pair had installed in the rear of the van, beneath which they placed tools, clothes and a cooler filled with beer and soft drinks. At approximately 11 a.m., the pair drove to "the beach area, drinking beer, smoking grass and flirting with girls. We had no set routine."[11]:256


At approximately 7:46 p.m.,[21] Norris spotted Schaefer walking down a side street and remarked to Bittaker, "There's a cute little blonde."[11]:256




The San Gabriel Mountains. Bittaker and Norris murdered and discarded the bodies of four of their victims at this location.


After unsuccessfully attempting to entice Schaefer into their van with alternate offers of marijuana and a lift home, Bittaker and Norris drove further ahead and parked alongside a driveway. Norris then exited the vehicle, opened the passenger-side sliding door, and leaned into the van, with his head and shoulders obscured from view behind the door. When Lucinda Schaefer passed the van, Norris exchanged a few words with her before dragging her into the van and closing the door. Using a ruse they would repeat in most of their subsequent murders, Bittaker turned the radio to full volume as Norris bound the victim's arms and legs and gagged her with duct tape as Bittaker drove Schaefer to the fire road in the San Gabriel Mountains where, in April, the pair had previously switched the locks.[11]:257


Despite initially screaming when she was abducted, Lucinda Schaefer quickly regained her composure. In his written account of the night that followed, Bittaker wrote that Lucinda Schaefer "displayed a magnificent state of self-control and composed acceptance of the conditions of which she had no control. She shed no tears, offered no resistance and expressed no great concern for her safety ... I guess she knew what was coming."


At the fire road, Norris first raped Schaefer after instructing Bittaker to "go take a walk" and return in one hour. Upon returning to the van, Bittaker similarly raped the girl in Norris' absence. Upon the second occasion in which she was raped by Norris in Bittaker's absence, Schaefer asked him whether they intended to kill her, to which Norris replied, "No." In response, Schaefer requested to be allowed time to pray before she was killed if that was Bittaker and Norris' intention.[22]


In their subsequent accounts of the actual murder, Bittaker and Norris have given differing accounts as to who argued over whether they should kill her rather than release her: each stated the other argued that they should kill her.[11]:259 In any event, Schaefer pleaded for "only a second, to pray,"[4]:137 before Norris attempted to manually strangle her. After approximately 45 seconds, he became disturbed at "the look in her eyes"[2] and ran to the front of the van, vomiting. Bittaker then manually strangled Schaefer until she collapsed to the ground and began convulsing. He then twisted a wire coat hanger around her neck with vise-grip pliers until Schaefer's convulsions ceased. Lucinda Schaefer was denied her requests to pray before Bittaker and Norris killed her.[23]


Lucinda Schaefer's body was wrapped in a plastic shower curtain and thrown over a steep canyon Bittaker had selected. According to Norris, after Bittaker had thrown Schaefer over the canyon, Bittaker assured him "the animals would eat her up, so there wouldn't be any evidence left."[11]:258



Andrea Joy Hall[edit]


On July 8, 1979, two weeks after the murder of Lucinda Schaefer, Bittaker and Norris encountered 18-year-old Andrea Joy Hall hitchhiking along the Pacific Coast Highway.[11]:258 As the pair slowed the van to offer Hall a lift, another vehicle pulled over and offered Hall exactly that, which she accepted. Bittaker and Norris followed the vehicle from a distance until Hall got out in Redondo Beach.[3]




A 1977 Chevrolet van with sliding door. Bittaker and Norris used a windowless GMC Vandura model similar to this van when committing their abductions.


On this occasion, Norris hid in the back of the van in order to dupe Hall into thinking Bittaker was alone. Inside the van, Bittaker offered Hall a soft drink from the cooler located in the rear of the van. Norris pounced on her when she went to retrieve it and, after a strenuous fight, managed to subdue Hall by twisting her arm behind her back, causing her to scream in pain. Norris then gagged Hall with adhesive tape and bound her wrists and ankles.[24]


Bittaker and Norris drove Hall to a location in the San Gabriel Mountains beyond where they had taken Lucinda Schaefer. At this location, she was raped twice by Bittaker and once by Norris.[22] While Bittaker was raping Hall for the second time, Norris saw what he believed to be vehicle headlights approaching. Bittaker clasped his hand over Hall's mouth and dragged her into nearby bushes as Norris drove in an unsuccessful search of the vehicle thought he had seen. When he returned, the pair drove to a location farther in the San Gabriel Mountains. Bittaker forced Hall to walk uphill naked alongside the road and to then perform oral sex on him, before ordering Hall to pose for several Polaroid pictures.[11]:259


Bittaker and Norris drove Hall to a third location, where Bittaker again walked Hall up a nearby hill, this time as Norris drove to a nearby store to purchase alcohol. When Norris returned, Bittaker was alone and in possession of two further Polaroid pictures he had taken,[22] both of which depicted Hall's face in expressions Norris later described as being of "sheer terror" as she begged for her life to be spared.[9]:88 Bittaker informed Norris that he had told Hall he was going to kill her and challenged her to give him as many reasons as she could come up with as to why she should be allowed to live, before thrusting an ice pick through her ear into her brain. He then turned her body over and thrust the ice pick into her other ear, stomping on it until the handle broke.[22] Bittaker then strangled before throwing her body off a cliff.[11]:258–259



Jackie Doris Gilliam and Jacqueline Leah Lamp[edit]


On September 3, Bittaker and Norris observed two girls named Jackie Doris Gilliam and Jacqueline Leah Lamp sitting on a bus stop bench located close to Hermosa Beach. Lamp and Gilliam had been hitchhiking along the Pacific Coast Highway before Bittaker and Norris observed them as they were resting at the bus stop. Bittaker and Norris offered the girls a ride, which Gilliam and Lamp accepted. Inside the van, both girls were offered marijuana by Norris, which they accepted.[11]:259


Shortly after entering the van, both girls realized that Bittaker had steered the van off the Pacific Coast Highway and was driving in the direction of the San Gabriel Mountains. When the girls protested, both Bittaker and Norris attempted to allay the girls' concerns with excuses, which did not deceive either girl. Lamp, aged 13, attempted to open the sliding door, whereupon Norris hit her on the back of the head with a bag filled with lead weights,[14] briefly knocking her unconscious, before overpowering 15-year-old Jackie Gilliam. As he began to bind and gag Gilliam, Jacqueline Lamp regained consciousness and again attempted to flee the van, whereupon Norris twisted her arm behind her back and dragged her back into the van. As this struggle ensued, Bittaker—noting the girls' struggle was in full view of potential witnesses—stopped the van, punched Gilliam in the face, and assisted Norris in finishing binding and gagging the two girls.


Gilliam and Lamp were driven to the San Gabriel Mountains, where they were held captive for almost two days,[11]:260 being bound and gagged between repeated instances of sexual and physical abuse. Both men slept in the van alongside their two hostages, with each alternatively acting as a lookout. On one occasion, Bittaker walked Lamp onto a nearby hill and forced her to pose for pornographic pictures before returning her to the van. Bittaker also informed Norris to take several Polaroid pictures of himself and Gilliam, both nude and clothed. In the first of three instances in which Bittaker raped Gilliam, he also created a tape recording of himself raping her, forcing the girl to pretend she was his cousin[11]:260 and informing Gilliam to feel free to express her pain. (Bittaker later claimed he buried the tape in a cemetery. The tape recording of Gilliam's rape was never found.) Bittaker is also known to have tortured Gilliam by stabbing her breasts with an ice pick and using vise grip pliers to tear off part of one nipple.


After almost two days of captivity, Lamp and Gilliam were murdered. At Bittaker's subsequent trial, Norris claimed he had suggested that Gilliam be killed quickly as, unlike Lamp, she had been largely cooperative throughout the period of her captivity, whereupon Bittaker replied, "No, they only die once anyway." Gilliam was struck in each ear with an ice pick, then strangled to death.


After Bittaker had murdered Jackie Gilliam, he then forced Jacqueline Leah Lamp out of the van. Upon exiting the sliding door, Bittaker shouted to her: "You wanted to stay a virgin; now you can die a virgin!"[25]:232 before Norris struck her upon the head with a sledgehammer. Bittaker then strangled Lamp until he believed she had died; when Lamp opened her eyes,[11]:260 Norris again bludgeoned her repeatedly as Bittaker strangled her to death.


The bodies of Jackie Gilliam and Jacqueline Lamp were thrown over an embankment into the chaparral.



Shirley Lynette Ledford[edit]


Bittaker and Norris abducted their final victim, 16-year-old Shirley Lynette Ledford, on October 31, 1979. Ledford was abducted as she stood outside a gas station;[9]:252 hitchhiking home from a Halloween party in the Sunland-Tujunga suburb of Los Angeles. Investigators believe Ledford accepted a ride home from Bittaker and Norris because she recognized Bittaker, as he is known to have frequented the restaurant in which Ledford held a part-time job as a waitress.[9]:85


Upon accepting the offer of a lift home and entering the van, Ledford was offered marijuana by Norris, which she refused.[3] Bittaker drove the van to a secluded street, where Norris drew a knife, then bound and gagged Ledford with construction tape.[11]:258


Bittaker then traded places with Norris, who drove in an aimless manner for in excess of an hour as Bittaker remained with Ledford in the back of the van. After removing the construction tape from the girl's mouth and legs, Bittaker tormented Ledford: initially slapping and mocking her, then beating her with his fists as he repeatedly shouted for her to "say something", then, as Shirley Ledford began screaming, shouting for her to "scream louder". As Ledford continued screaming, Bittaker began asking her as he struck her: "What's the matter? Don't you like to scream?"[11]:261


As Shirley Ledford began to cry, she pleaded with Bittaker, saying, "No, don't touch me." In response, Bittaker again ordered her to scream as loud as she wished, then began alternately striking her with a hammer, beating her breasts with his fists[25]:232 and torturing her with pliers both between and throughout instances when he raped and sodomized her. Repeatedly, Ledford can be heard pleading for the abuse to cease and making statements such as, "Oh no! No!"[11]:262 as sounds of Bittaker alternately extracting either the sledgehammer or the pliers from the toolbox can be heard on a tape recorder he had switched on after entering the rear of the van. Norris later described hearing "screams ... constant screams" emanating from the rear of the van as he drove.[3]


Shortly after Norris switched places with Bittaker, he himself switched on the tape recorder which Bittaker had used to record much of the time he had been in the rear of the van with Ledford.[22] Norris first shouted for Ledford to: "Go ahead and scream or I'll make you scream."[11]:262 In response, Ledford pleaded, "I'll scream if you stop hitting me," then emitted several high-pitched screams as Norris encouraged her to continue until he ordered her to stop.


Norris then reached for the sledgehammer as Shirley Ledford—seeing him do this—screamed, "Oh no!" Norris then struck Ledford once upon the left elbow. In response, she informed Norris he had broken her elbow, before pleading, "Don't hit me again."[11]:262–263 In response, Norris again raised the sledgehammer as Ledford repeatedly screamed, "No!" Norris then proceeded to strike Ledford 25 consecutive times upon the same elbow with the sledgehammer, before asking her, "What are you sniveling about?" as Ledford continuously screamed and wept.



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We've all heard women scream in horror films ... still, we know that no-one is really screaming. Why? Simply because an actress can't produce some sounds that convince us that something vile and heinous is happening. If you ever heard that tape, there is just no possible way that you'd not begin crying and trembling. I doubt you could listen to more than a full sixty seconds of it.

Roy Norris, describing his recollections of the audio tape the pair had created of Shirley Ledford's rape and torture. April 1997.[9]:82



After approximately two hours of captivity, Norris killed Ledford by strangling her with a wire coat hanger, which he tightened with pliers. Ledford did not react much to the act of strangulation, although she died with her eyes open.[9]:89 Bittaker then opted to discard her body on a random lawn in order to view the reaction from the press. The pair drove to a randomly selected house in Sunland and discarded Ledford's body in a bed of ivy upon the front lawn.


Shirley Lynette Ledford's body was found by a jogger the following morning. An autopsy revealed that, in addition to having been sexually violated, she had died of strangulation after receiving extensive blunt-force trauma to the face, head, breasts, and left elbow, with her olecranon sustaining multiple fractures. Her genitalia and rectum had been torn, caused in part by Bittaker having inserted pliers inside her body.[25]:233–234 In addition, her left hand bore a puncture wound and a finger on her right hand had been slashed.[25]:226[26]


Bittaker would later claim the tape recording the pair had created of Shirley Ledford's clear abuse and torture offered nothing other than the evidence of a threesome, adding that, towards the very end, Shirley Ledford was screaming for he and Norris to kill her.[4]:139



Investigation[edit]


In November 1979, Roy Norris became reacquainted with a friend named Jimmy Dalton, an individual with whom he had previously been incarcerated at the California Men's Colony.[4]:146 Norris confided in this individual as to his and Bittaker's exploits over the previous five months, including graphic details of the murder of Shirley Ledford (the only victim whose body had been found at this time). Norris also divulged to Dalton that, in addition to the five murders he and Bittaker had committed, there had been three additional incidents in which he and Bittaker had abducted or attempted to abduct young women who had either successfully escaped their attackers or, in one instance, had actually been raped but released.[25]:226


Upon hearing Norris's confessions, Dalton consulted his attorney, who advised him to inform authorities.[11]:264 Dalton agreed, and he and his attorney informed the Los Angeles Police Department, who in turn relayed the two men to the Redondo Beach police.


A Redondo Beach Detective named Paul Bynum was assigned to investigate Dalton's claims as to Norris's confessions of the murders, attempted abductions, and rapes which he had confided to Dalton had occurred between June and October.[11]:264 Bynum initially noted that Dalton's statements as to Norris's confessions did match reports on file of several teenage girls who had been reported missing over the previous five months.[11]:264 In addition, the incident Norris had confided to Dalton where he claimed he and Bittaker had sprayed mace in the face of a woman, who had then been dragged into Bittaker's GMC van and raped by both men, matched a report filed in relation to an incident which occurred on September 30. In this filed report, a young woman named Robin Robeck had had mace sprayed in her face before being dragged into a van and raped by two Caucasian men in their mid-30s, before being released.[11]:263 Although Robeck had reported the abduction and rape to police, they had been unable to identify her assailants.[11]:263-264


Bynum dispatched an investigator to visit Robin Robeck at her residence in Oregon, to show her a series of mug shots. Without hesitation, Robeck positively identified two photos presented to her as those of the men who had kidnapped and raped her on September 30. The two individuals she identified were Lawrence Bittaker and Roy Norris.



Arrest[edit]


Upon linking Bittaker and Norris to the rape of Robin Robeck, the Hermosa Beach police placed Roy Norris under surveillance;[11]:263 within days, they had observed his dealing in marijuana. On November 20, 1979,[27] Norris was arrested by the Hermosa Beach police for parole violation. The same day, at the Burbank motel where he resided, Bittaker was arrested for the rape of Robin Robeck.


Although Robeck had been able to identify mug shots of Bittaker and Norris, in a police lineup she was unable to positively identify her assailants.[26] Nonetheless, police had observed Norris dealing in marijuana, whereas Bittaker had been in possession of drugs at the time of his arrest. Both were held on charges of parole violation.


A search of Bittaker's apartment revealed several Polaroid photographs which were determined as depicting Andrea Joy Hall and Jackie Gilliam—both of whom had been reported as missing earlier the same year. Inside Bittaker's van, investigators discovered a sledgehammer, a plastic bag filled with lead weights, a book detailing how to locate police radio frequencies,[22] a jar of Vaseline, two necklaces (later confirmed as belonging to two of the victims) and a tape recording of a young woman in obvious distress; screaming and pleading for mercy while in the process of torture and sexual abuse.[26] The mother of Shirley Lynette Ledford—named by Jimmy Dalton as being one of the women whom Norris had confessed he and Bittaker had killed—identified the voice on the tape as being that of her only daughter; the voices of the two men mocking and threatening Shirley Ledford in the process of her torture and abuse were identified as being Roy Norris and Lawrence Bittaker.[28] Also found in Bittaker's motel were seven bottles of various acidic materials. (Investigators would later discover Bittaker planned to use these acidic materials upon their next victim.)


Inside Norris's apartment, police discovered a bracelet he had taken from Shirley Ledford's body as a souvenir. Also found at the homes of both Bittaker and Norris were Polaroid pictures of almost 500 teenage girls and young women, most of which had apparently been taken at Redondo Beach and Hermosa Beach,[18]:41 with others taken by Bittaker at a Burbank high school. Most of these pictures had been taken without the girls' knowledge or consent.



Confession[edit]


On November 30, 1979, Norris attended a preliminary hearing in relation to the September 30 rape. By this stage, Norris was beginning to display visible signs of stress.[11]:265 At the hearing, Norris waived his Miranda rights, before Detective Bynum and Deputy District Attorney Stephen Kay began questioning him, initially in relation to the rape of Robin Robeck; then in relation to the statements given to police by Jimmy Dalton and the evidence recovered from his and Bittaker's residences.


Initially, Norris flatly denied any involvement in any murders, rapes or disappearances; however, when confronted with the evidence investigators had compiled, Norris began to confess, although he did attempt to portray Bittaker as being more culpable in the murders than himself. In what Bynum and Kay later described as a "casual, unconcerned manner,"[11]:266 Norris divulged that he and Bittaker had been in the habit of driving around areas such as the Pacific Coast Highway and randomly approaching girls whom they found attractive with offers of a ride, posing with the pair for photographs,[26] or marijuana. Most of those whom they approached rejected whatever given ruse Bittaker and Norris used to entice them into the van; although four girls had accepted lifts from the pair and had been murdered, with a fifth victim—their first—being grabbed by force.[11]:257


Inside the van, the girls would typically be overpowered, bound hand and foot, gagged, and driven to locations deep within the San Gabriel Mountains, where they would be sexually assaulted by both men, then usually killed by strangulation with a wire coat hanger,[29] although two of the victims had had ice picks driven into their ears before being strangled. Norris admitted to bludgeoning their youngest victim, Jacqueline Leah Lamp, about the head with a sledgehammer as Bittaker strangled her, and admitted to repeatedly striking Shirley Ledford upon the elbow with a sledgehammer before strangling her to death. The bottles of acid found at Bittaker's motel, Norris stated, were intended for use upon the next victim they abducted.


According to Norris, the level of brutality Bittaker had exhibited towards their victims had increased on each successive instance they had successfully lured a girl into the van: their final victim, Shirley Ledford, had actually pleaded to be killed in order that her agony could cease. Additional details provided by Norris provided further corroborating evidence to support his confessions. For example, he knew that their first victim, Lucinda Schaefer, had left a meeting at a Presbyterian Church shortly before she was abducted and that Schaefer had lost one shoe as she had been dragged into Bittaker's van. Norris also knew part of Shirley Ledford's ancestry was Hispanic, and that Bittaker had unsuccessfully asked her to date him prior to October 1979.[9]:85


In a press statement relating to the police investigation into the murders issued on February 7, 1980, Los Angeles County Sheriff Peter Pitchess stated the victims had been subjected to "sadistic and barbaric abuse,"[30] adding that five charges of first-degree murder would be sought against both Bittaker and Norris. Sheriff Pitchess also stated that, in relation to the Polaroid pictures found in Bittaker and Norris's apartments, police had located 60 of the young women depicted—none of whom had been harmed.[18]:42


Nonetheless, Pitchess also stated that police had also identified 19 of the women depicted in the pictures as being individuals who had been reported missing,[31] and that these teenage girls and young women may well have been murdered,[32] although Pitchess did stress that they had no conclusive evidence to suggest that these additional 19 women photographed had fallen victim to Bittaker and Norris.[33]


One of the individuals depicted in the Polaroid pictures seized from Bittaker and Norris depicts an unidentified young white woman, alone with Bittaker and Norris, in circumstances very similar to the pictures found depicting known victims Andrea Hall, Jacqueline Leah Lamp, and Jackie Gilliam. The young woman in the pictures has never been identified. This photograph is indicative there may have been one further victim[25]:234 whom neither Bittaker or Norris have ever mentioned to investigators.[18]:42



Search of San Gabriel Mountains[edit]


Norris agreed to return to the San Gabriel Mountains to search for the bodies of the girls to whose abduction and murder he had confessed to assisting in. In each instance, Norris brought detectives to the area where he and Bittaker had disposed of their victims' bodies. Despite extensive searches of the areas where he stated the bodies of Lucinda Schaefer and Andrea Hall had been discarded, their bodies were never found. Nonetheless, on February 9, 1980,[34] the skeletalized bodies of Jacqueline Leah Lamp and Jackie Doris Gilliam were found at the bottom of a canyon, alongside a dry river bed.[11]:266 The bodies were scattered over an area measuring hundreds of feet in diameter. An ice pick was still lodged in the skull of Jackie Gilliam;[11]:260 the skull of Jacqueline Leah Lamp bore multiple indentations—evidence of the numerous hammer blows Norris had stated he inflicted.




The San Gabriel Mountains. Norris was able to lead investigators to the bodies of two of the four victims he and Bittaker had murdered at this location.


In February 1980, Norris and Bittaker were formally charged with the murders of the five girls.[35] At the arraignment, Bittaker was denied bail, whereas Norris's bail was set at $10,000.[36] Within one month of his being charged with murder, Norris had accepted a plea bargain in which he would testify against Bittaker in return for the prosecution agreeing not to seek the death penalty against him.[37]



Guilty plea[edit]


On March 18, 1980, Roy Norris pleaded guilty to four counts of first-degree murder; one count of second-degree murder (in relation to victim Andrea Joy Hall),[2] two counts of rape, and one count of robbery. Formal sentencing was postponed until May 7.[38]


In return for Norris's agreeing to plead guilty and to testify against Lawrence Bittaker, prosecutors had agreed to seek neither the death penalty nor life without parole at the upcoming sentencing hearing.[11]:266


Prior to his May 7 sentencing, Norris was reviewed by a probation officer who testified at his sentencing that Norris had again accused Bittaker of the actual torture of their victims, and that for Norris himself, the feeling of power and the dominance he had over the victims was the main overriding factor, as opposed to having sexual intercourse with them.[11]:266 The parole officer added that Norris "never exhibited any remorse or compassion about his brutal acts towards the victims ... the defendant appears compulsive in his need to desire to inflict pain and torture upon women." In conclusion, the probation officer testified that Norris "can realistically be regarded as an extreme sociopath, whose depraved pattern of behavior is beyond rehabilitation."[11]:266


On May 7, 1980, Roy Norris was sentenced to 45 years to life imprisonment, with eligibility for parole from 2010.



Arraignment[edit]


On April 24, 1980, Lawrence Bittaker was arraigned on a total of 29 charges of kidnapping, rape, sodomy, and murder in addition to various charges of criminal conspiracy and possession of a firearm.[18]:42 He was also charged with two counts of conspiracy to commit murder dating from December 1979 in which he had unsuccessfully attempted to persuade two inmates due to be released to murder Robin Robeck in order to prevent her from testifying against him at his upcoming trial.[39] The charges for the rape of Robin Robeck would later be dropped because of a lack of physical evidence as well as Robeck's failing to identify her attackers in a lineup.[35]


When asked by Judge William Hollingsworth as to how he pleaded, Bittaker remained silent—refusing to answer any questions.[18]:42 In response, the judge entered a plea of not guilty on his behalf.



Trial[edit]


The trial of Lawrence Bittaker began on January 19, 1981.[25]:226 He was tried in Torrance before Judge Thomas Fredericks.


The star witness to appear for the prosecution at the trial of Lawrence Bittaker was Roy Norris,[40] who began his testimony on January 22. Norris testified as to how he became acquainted with Bittaker in jail, and how the pair had formulated a plan to kidnap, rape and kill teenage girls. Responding to questions from the prosecutor, Norris stated that in June 1979, he had unsuccessfully attempted to abduct and rape a woman, who escaped unharmed.[22] When he informed Bittaker of this incident, they both agreed to act together on all future abductions.[41][11]:254


Norris then chronologically recounted for the court the details of each of the five murders he and Bittaker had committed in addition to the September 30, 1979 rape of Robin Robeck, the attempted abduction of a woman named Jan Malin, which had also occurred on September 30, and the attempted abduction of an unidentified young woman on September 27.[22]


In reference to the actual murders, Norris stated that after he unsuccessfully attempted to strangle Lucinda Schaefer, Bittaker had strangled her with a wire coat hanger. The pair had then thrown her body into a location at or near the San Dimas Canyon.[42] In reference to the murder of Andrea Hall, Norris stated he had been told by Bittaker to drive to a nearby store to purchase alcohol when Hall was murdered, after which he returned to find Bittaker, smiling and holding Polaroid pictures he had taken of Hall after informing her he intended to kill her. With reference to victims Jacqueline Lamp and Jackie Gilliam, Norris stated that the two girls were held captive for "over a day" before being murdered, adding that Bittaker had killed Gilliam before he himself bludgeoned Lamp about the head as Bittaker strangled her. When discussing the abuse and torture of Shirley Lynette Ledford, Norris stated he had, upon the insistence of Bittaker, committed the actual murder of Ledford, adding Bittaker had informed him that "I should kill her, because I hadn't killed anyone yet. I knew this was coming, so I agreed." Norris then confessed to having killed Ledford by strangling her with a coat hanger, which he had tightened with pliers in much the same manner Bittaker had with previous victims Lucinda Schaefer and Jacqueline Lamp. Norris then stated the pair had driven to Sunland, where he discarded Shirley Ledford's body upon the front lawn as Bittaker waited in his van.[9]:89


Several witnesses testified as to Bittaker having shown them pictures of the victims he had retained as keepsakes and which had been found in his motel. One witness, a 17-year-old neighbor of Bittaker's named Christina Dralle, testified that Bittaker had shown her a Polaroid picture he had taken of Jackie Gilliam before stating, "The girls I get won't talk anymore."[14] Another witness to testify was an individual named Lloyd Douglas, who had shared a jail cell with Bittaker following his November 1979 arrest. Douglas testified that Bittaker had discussed in detail the torture he had inflicted on victims Jackie Gilliam and Shirley Ledford, stating Bittaker had informed him he had stabbed one of Gilliam's breasts with an ice pick, which he then twisted as the tool remained inserted in the wound;[14] he had also "pinched" Gilliam on the legs and breasts with a vise grip, before tearing off part of one nipple.[14] Douglas also stated Bittaker had informed him he had "pulled on" the genitals and breasts of Shirley Ledford with the same instrument, and that he had attempted to beat her breasts "back into her chest."[25]:232


The defense contended that Norris was the actual perpetrator of the murders and that Bittaker had only become aware of Norris's activities shortly before his arrest when Norris had informed him he had murdered several girls with whom they had both encountered and engaged in sexual activities. To support their case, the defense produced a friend of Norris named Richard Shoopman, who testified as to Norris's repeatedly divulging to him his desire to rape young girls.[22] Shoopman also testified that Norris had informed him that the look of shock and fear on the face of a young girl was a prime sexual stimulus for him. In support of Bittaker's case, the defense also harked to the Polaroid images taken of the facial expressions of Andrea Hall, and of Bittaker's statements as to Norris's revelations to Bittaker regarding his prime sexual stimulations while both were incarcerated at the California Men's Colony in 1977.




Shirley Lynette Ledford. The audio recording of her abuse at Bittaker's hands was the most damning evidence presented at his trial.


The most damning evidence presented at Bittaker's trial was a 17-minute section of the audio tape the pair had created of Shirley Lynette Ledford's abuse and torment. The audiotape, which had been found inside Bittaker's van and which Norris had earlier testified Bittaker had repeatedly played as he drove in the weeks prior to his arrest—adding that Bittaker considered the contents to be "real funny"[18]:42—was presented in evidence on January 29, with Stephen Kay forewarning the jury: "For those of you who do not know what hell is like, you will find out."[43] (Judge Fredericks had earlier denied motions by the defense to omit the tape recording from admission as evidence.[44])


More than 100 people were present in the courtroom as the tape was played, and many members of both the jury and the audience wept openly upon hearing the contents, with several members of the audience either burying their heads in their hands, dabbing tears from their eyes or rushing out of the courtroom before the tape had finished.[45] Bittaker was undisturbed at hearing the contents of the tape—smiling throughout the hearing of the recording.[46]


In one of two instances throughout the trial when prosecutor Stephen Kay was reduced to tears,[11]:267 he walked out of the courtroom during recess following the hearing of the recording of Shirley Ledford's rape, abuse, and torture. Weeping openly, Kay stated to the reporters gathered outside the courtroom: "Everybody who has heard that tape has had it affect their lives. I just picture those girls ... how alone they were when they died."[45] When questioned by reporters as to whether the audiotape should have been introduced into evidence, given the obvious psychological and emotional trauma caused to many in the courtroom through the contents being broadcast, Kay simply stated: "You're darn right it [the audio tape] should have been. The jury needs to know what these guys did."[47]


On February 5, 1981, Bittaker testified on his own behalf.[25]:234 Bittaker denied any knowledge in the abduction and murder of Lucinda Schaefer, and claimed he had paid Andrea Hall to pose for the Polaroid photographs depicting her found at his Burbank motel after Hall had agreed to his offer of $200 for sex. He then claimed Norris had walked Hall into the San Gabriel Mountains, before returning alone and informing Bittaker he had told Hall to "find her own way home."


Bittaker had a similar explanation as to the double murder of Jacqueline Lamp and Jackie Gilliam: he claimed Gilliam accepted an offer of money for sex and posing for pictures, and that he had last seen the girls alone with Norris in his GMC van. With regards to the murder of Shirley Ledford, he claimed she had agreed to theatrically scream for the tape recorder, and that she was not tortured in his presence, but had been left alone with Norris.


Bittaker's trial lasted for over three weeks. On February 10, 1981,[48] the prosecution and defense counsels began their closing arguments. In the closing argument delivered by the prosecution, Stephen Kay apologized to the jury that he was only asking for the death penalty, adding that he wished the law permitted him to request that the same suffering be inflicted upon Bittaker that he had inflicted upon his victims.[49] Kay then described Bittaker as an "excuse for a man" as he held aloft pictures of each of the five murdered girls before the jury. Seeking the death penalty for Bittaker, Kay referred to the case as "one of the most shocking, brutal cases in the history of American crime," before adding: "If the death penalty is not appropriate in this case, then when will it ever be?"[50]


Defense attorney Albert Garber requested the jury discount the testimony of Roy Norris; arguing in favor of Bittaker's claims that Norris had committed the actual murders, and claiming the testimony of the prosecutors throughout the trial amounted to little more than a "bloodlust," adding that the prosecution had repeatedly recited the "gory details" of the murders. Garber harked to the earlier testimony of a psychologist named Michael Maloney, who had testified as to Bittaker's inability to empathize with other people's feelings and emotions[22] in addition to the fact that, with the exception of Bittaker's 1974 stabbing of Gary Louie, all of Bittaker's previous criminal convictions were for nonviolent offenses. The defense also claimed that insufficient corroborative evidence existed to convict Bittaker.[22]




They [Bittaker and Norris] lack the internal prohibitions, or conscience, that keep most of us from giving full expression to our most primitive, and sometimes violent, impulses.

Forensic Psychiatrist Dr. Ronald Markman, reciting conclusions of his analysis of Bittaker and Norris, 1989.[25]:234



On February 17, 1981,[51] after deliberating for three days, the jury found Bittaker guilty of five counts of first-degree murder, one charge of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder, five charges of kidnapping, nine charges of rape, two charges of forcible oral copulation,[52] one charge of sodomy, and three charges of unlawful possession of a firearm.[53] Deliberations as to whether Bittaker should be sentenced to death or life without parole began February 19.


The jury deliberated for just 90 minutes[53] before they returned with their verdict: Bittaker was sentenced to death for the five counts of first-degree murder upon which the prosecution had sought this penalty.[40] He showed no emotion as the verdict was delivered. Superior Court Judge Thomas Fredericks then ordered Bittaker to appear in court on March 24 for formal sentencing.[54]


On March 24, in accordance with the jury verdict, Lawrence Bittaker was formally sentenced to death. In the event that the sentence imposed was ever reverted to life imprisonment, Judge Thomas Fredericks imposed an alternate sentence of 199 years, 4 months' imprisonment to take immediate effect.[25]:234



Imprisonment and appeals[edit]


Bittaker appealed his conviction and sentencing, citing procedural errors such as the validity of warrants used to authorize the search of his van and motel room, and the dismissal by the judge of a woman initially hired at the stage of jury selection to advise the defense counsel in matters relating to jury views upon the death penalty. Nonetheless, Bittaker's appeal was dismissed on June 22, 1989, with the court ruling that any procedural errors were minor and—in view of the strong evidence against Bittaker—did not affect the overall verdict.[55]


An initial execution date for Lawrence Bittaker was set for December 29, 1989.[56] Bittaker appealed this decision, although on June 11, 1990, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the decision that he be executed. A renewed execution date was scheduled for July 23, 1991. Bittaker again appealed the decision of the U.S. Supreme Court that he be executed, and was granted a further stay of execution on July 9, 1991.[9]:253


As of 2018[update], Lawrence Bittaker remains incarcerated on death row at San Quentin State Prison.[5]



Aftermath[edit]




Bittaker remains incarcerated on death row at San Quentin State Prison.


Lawrence Bittaker has granted several death row interviews following his 1981 conviction. To date, he has never expressed any remorse for his crimes, and states the only remorse he feels is for the fact he and Norris were arrested, thus "ruining" his own life.[57] Despite the fact Bittaker currently considers his life to have been a "wasted" one,[58] he has also marveled that he and Norris had little in common before their acquaintance at the California Men's Colony in San Luis Obispo in 1977, before adding that they have "one hell of a lot in common now!"[18]:44 In reference to one of the torture- and murder implements he and Norris used upon their victims, Bittaker responds to letters he receives with the nickname "Pliers" Bittaker.[59]


Since his incarceration, Bittaker has filed more than 40 frivolous lawsuits[60] over issues as trivial as his being served a broken cookie and crushed sandwiches by the prison cafeteria, which he cited as an example of his being subjected to cruel and unusual punishment.[61] Bittaker was declared a vexatious litigant in 1993.[62] As a result of this declaration, he may no longer file lawsuits without the express permission of an attorney or a judge.[63]


Roy Norris remains incarcerated at Donovan State Prison. Since his conviction, he has repeatedly claimed the sole reason he participated in the murders was out of fear of Bittaker.[4]:135 Norris also claims to have twice contemplated confessing to his and Bittaker's responsibility in the murders to the police; he also claims to have successfully deterred three potential victims from entering Bittaker's van.[9]:78


Norris claims that although he enjoyed the actual intercourse with the victims, only Bittaker enjoyed the act of torture and murder, stating: "I didn't enjoy killing—that was Lawrence [Bittaker]. It was his favorite part:[4]:135 watching the women struggle to live; knowing he'd soon be taking life away." (Both investigators and psychologists have stated Norris derived extreme gratification from the domination, abuse, and torture inflicted upon his victims; these respective parties have also harked towards Norris's extensive history of physical and sexual violence against women prior to his meeting Bittaker, and his repeated instances of denial of culpability for his actions.[9]:66)


Roy Norris initially became eligible for parole in 2009.[64] Norris declined to attend the parole hearing, thereby automatically deferring his parole eligibility for another 10 years. He is next eligible for parole in 2019.[64][65][66]


Stephen Kay, the prosecutor at Bittaker's trial, still considers the murders committed by Bittaker and Norris as being the worst criminal case he has ever prosecuted or encountered and remains insistent in his belief that Bittaker deserves to be executed more than any other inmate incarcerated on California's death row.[67] In interviews, he has stated that for over two years following the trial of Lawrence Bittaker, his sleep was disturbed by recurring nightmares in which he would be rushing to Bittaker's van to prevent harm coming to the girls, but would "always get there too late."[64]


Detective Paul Bynum, the chief investigator of the murders committed by Bittaker and Norris, committed suicide in December 1987. He was 39 years old. In a ten-page suicide note,[11]:276 Bynum specifically referred to the murders committed by Bittaker and Norris as haunting him, and of his fear they may be released from prison.[64]


The audio tape Bittaker and Norris created of themselves raping and torturing Shirley Lynette Ledford remains in the possession of the FBI Academy. The audio cassette is now used to train and desensitize FBI agents to the raw reality of torture and murder.[68]



Media[edit]



Film[edit]


  • The 2012 documentary film The Devil and the Death Penalty focuses upon the murders committed by Bittaker and Norris in addition to issues relating to the death penalty appeals process in California. Prosecutor Stephen Kay is among those interviewed by the director.[69]


Bibliography[edit]



  • Alone with The Devil: Psychopathic Killings that Shocked the World, written by Dr. Ronald Marksman and Dominick Bosco. ISBN 0-7499-1002-X


  • The Encyclopedia Of Serial Killers, written by Brian Lane and Wilfred Gregg. ISBN 978-0-7472-5361-7


Television[edit]


  • A 1982 documentary, The Killing of America, features a section devoted to the trial of Lawrence Bittaker.[70]

  • The crime documentary series Arrest & Trial has broadcast an episode detailing the murders committed by Bittaker and Norris. This episode was initially broadcast in October 2000.

  • The Investigation Discovery channel has broadcast a documentary focusing upon the murders committed by Bittaker and Norris. This documentary, titled Wicked Attraction, was initially broadcast in August 2009.[71]


See also[edit]









References[edit]



Notes[edit]




  1. ^ "Bittaker sentenced to death". Boca Raton News. Associated Press. February 25, 1981. p. 3A. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  2. ^ abc "Man faces 45 years in killings". The Gadsden Times. Associated Press. March 19, 1980. p. 20. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  3. ^ abcd Farr, Bill (March 19, 1980). "Girls' killer tells a gruesome story". The Tuscaloosa News. p. 27. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  4. ^ abcdefghi Furio, Jennifer (2001). Team Killers: A Comparative Study of Collaborative Criminals. Algora Publishing. ISBN 1892941635. 


  5. ^ ab Division of Adult Operations (July 5, 2011). "Death Row Tracking System Condemned Inmate List (Secure)" (PDF). California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. Retrieved July 8, 2011. 


  6. ^ Morain, Dan (August 20, 2016). "Lawrence Bittaker, a Most Depraved Killer, Twists Justice System". Sacramento Bee. Retrieved September 19, 2018. 


  7. ^ California, State of. "State of California Inmate Locator". Retrieved December 27, 2016. 


  8. ^ The Murder Almanac ISBN 978-1-897-78404-4 p. 19


  9. ^ abcdefghijklmnopqrst Furio, Jennifer (1998). The Serial Killer Letters. The Charles Press. ISBN 0-914783-84-X. 


  10. ^ "truTV - Reality TV - Comedy". Retrieved December 27, 2016. 


  11. ^ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagahaiajakalamanaoapaqarasatauavawaxayazbabbbcbd Markman, Ronald; Bosco, Dominick (1989). Alone with The Devil. Piatkus Publishing. ISBN 0-7499-1002-X. 


  12. ^ The Serial Killer Letters ISBN 978-0-914-78384-8 p. 77


  13. ^ The Serial Killer Letters ISBN 978-0-914-78384-8 p. 66


  14. ^ abcde "People v. Bittaker (1989)". Retrieved December 27, 2016. 


  15. ^ Mindhunter: Inside the FBI's Elite Serial Crime Unit ISBN 978-0-684-80376-0 p. 174


  16. ^ abcd "truTV - Reality TV - Comedy". Retrieved December 27, 2016. 


  17. ^ Extreme Killing: Understanding Serial and Mass Murder ISBN 978-1-483-35072-1 p. 85


  18. ^ abcdefghijkl True Detective. February 2011. ISSN 0262-4133. 


  19. ^ Murders in the United States: Crimes, Killers and Victims of the Twentieth ISBN 0-786-42075-8 p. 160


  20. ^ "Deceased/Not Found CA - Lucinda Schaefer, 17, Torrance, 24 June 1979 *Bittaker & Norris guilty*". Retrieved December 27, 2016. 


  21. ^ "NamUs - National Missing Persons Data System Case Report - 4571". Retrieved December 27, 2016. 


  22. ^ abcdefghijk "PEOPLE v. BITTAKER - 48 Cal.3d 1046 (1989) - Leagle.com". Retrieved December 27, 2016. 


  23. ^ Crime Classification Manual: A Standard System for Investigating and Classifying Violent Crime ISBN 978-1-897-78404-4 p. 134


  24. ^ "truTV - Reality TV - Comedy". Retrieved December 27, 2016. 


  25. ^ abcdefghijk Crime Classification Manual


  26. ^ abcd Newton, Michael (February 2006). The Encyclopedia of Serial Killers. Infobase Publishing. p. 21. ISBN 978-0-8160-6987-3. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  27. ^ "Girls Marked for Murder?". Daytona Beach Morning Journal. Associated Press. February 16, 1980. pp. 1A, 2A. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  28. ^ "Girl Begs for Mercy on Recording of Rape and Torture in Los Angeles". Evening Independent. Associated Press. February 15, 1980. p. 2A. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  29. ^ Crime Classification Manual: A Standard System for Investigating and Classifying Violent Crime ISBN 978-1-897-78404-4 p. 134


  30. ^ "Recordings link two to brutal sex slayings". The Gadsden Times. Associated Press. February 10, 1980. p. 13. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  31. ^ The Great Pictorial History of World Crime, Volume 2 ISBN 978-1-442-23843-5 p. 718


  32. ^ Gillott, Roger (February 18, 1980). "Were 500 marked for death?". The Telegraph. Nashua, New Hampshire. Associated Press. p. 32. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  33. ^ "Disappearance of 40 girls investigated". Lodi News-Sentinel. UPI. February 16, 1980. p. 3. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  34. ^ California Death Records. Gilliam, Jackie Doris.


  35. ^ ab "Were Young Girls Marked for Murder?". Spartanburg Herald-Journal. Associated Press. February 16, 1980. p. A1. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  36. ^ "Rape-torture-murder plot claims at least five girls' lives". Wilmington Morning Star. Associated Press. February 16, 1980. p. 4A. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  37. ^ "The People, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. Lawrence Sigmond Bittaker, Defendant and Appellant". findlaw.com. Retrieved September 19, 2018. 


  38. ^ "Guilty in torture murder". The Evening News. Newburgh, New York. Associated Press. March 19, 1980. p. 5A. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  39. ^ "Pleas given in 5 slayings". Lodi News-Sentinel. UPI. April 29, 1980. p. 11. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  40. ^ ab "Jury recommends death sentence for Bittaker". Morning News. Bowling Green, Kentucky. Associated Press. February 23, 1981. p. 6A. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  41. ^ "Teen girls' deaths bring 'guilty' ruling". Spokane Daily Chronicle. Associated Press. February 18, 1981. p. 23. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  42. ^ Crime Classification Manual: A Standard System for Investigating and Classifying Violent Crime ISBN 978-1-897-78404-4 p. 134


  43. ^ "A Stunned Jury in the Murder Trial of Lawrence Bittaker". upi.com. January 29, 1981. Retrieved September 25, 2016. 


  44. ^ "Jury asks death penalty". The Prescott Courier. Associated Press. February 22, 1981. p. 2A. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  45. ^ ab "Jurors, Lawyers Weep at Taped Screams of Victim". Evening Independent. Associated Press. January 30, 1981. p. 2A. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  46. ^ Couples who Kill ISBN 978-0-7490-8175-1 p. 28


  47. ^ The Times-News Jan. 31, 1981


  48. ^ "A Coathanger the State Claims Lawrence Bittaker Used to Kill One Victim". The San Bernardino County Sun. February 10, 1981. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  49. ^ "Dennis McCarthy: Pain lingers as death row inmate lives on". Retrieved December 27, 2016. 


  50. ^ "Death sentence ordered for murderer of 5 girls". Spokane Daily Chronicle. UPI. February 25, 1981. p. 2. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  51. ^ "Teen girls' deaths bring 'guilty' ruling". Spokane Daily Chronicle. Associated Press. February 18, 1981. p. 23. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  52. ^ "Bittaker sentenced to death". Boca Raton News. Associated Press. February 25, 1981. p. 3A. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  53. ^ ab "Suspect guilty in 5 murders". The Bulletin. Bend, Oregon. UPI. February 18, 1981. Retrieved October 16, 2017. 


  54. ^ "Bittaker Sentenced to Death". March 24, 1981 – via www.upi.com. 


  55. ^ Hager, Philip (June 23, 1989). "Death Sentence Upheld for Killer Who Showed 'Astonishing Cruelty'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved December 27, 2016. 


  56. ^ "Supreme Court Denies Appeal From Bittaker". Los Angeles Times. June 12, 1990. Retrieved December 27, 2016. 


  57. ^ Journey into Darkness ISBN 978-0-749-32394-3 p. 66


  58. ^ "Death Row Inmate Lawrence Bittaker said he's Getting Afraid of Death". The Sacramento Bee. August 20, 2016. Retrieved October 15, 2016. 


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Cited works and further reading[edit]



  • Douglas, John; Olshaker, Mark (1996). Journey Into Darkness. United Kingdom: Arrow Books. pp. 65–66; 125; 241; 330; 364. ISBN 978-0-749-32394-3. 


  • Fox, James Allan (2015). Extreme Killing: Understanding Serial and Mass Murder. London: Sage Publishing. pp. 85–86. ISBN 978-1-483-35072-1. 

  • Furio, Jennifer (1998). The Serial Killer Letters. The Charles Press. pp. 65–100; 251-261. ISBN 0-914783-84-X


  • Lane, Brian; Gregg, Wilfred (1995) [1992]. The Encyclopedia Of Serial Killers. New York City: Berkley Book. pp. 58–59. ISBN 0-425-15213-8. 

  • Markman, Dr. Ronald; Bosco, Dominick (1989). Alone with The Devil. Piatkus Publishing. pp. 248–277. ISBN 0-7499-1002-X


  • Schechter, Harold (2003). The Serial Killers Files. Ballantine Books. pp. 60–61,65,282,350,373,404. ISBN 0-345-46566-0. 


  • Whittington-Egan, Richard; Molly Whittington-Egan (2005). Murder On File: The World's Most Notorious Killers. U.K.: Neil Wilson Publishing. p. 19. ISBN 1-903238-91-9. 


External links[edit]



  • Lawrence Bittaker and Roy Norris at CrimeLibrary.com

  • People v. Lawrence Bittaker: Details of Bittaker's 1989 appeal against his conviction



Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lawrence_Bittaker_and_Roy_Norris&oldid=860217545"





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