Warren Forrest | |
---|---|
Born | Warren Leslie Forrest June 29, 1949 Vancouver, Washington, U.S. |
Conviction(s) | Murder ×2 Kidnapping Rape Attempted murder ×2 |
Criminal penalty | Life imprisonment ×2 |
Details | |
Victims | 2–7+ |
Span of crimes | July 11 –September 1, 1974 (confirmed) 1971 – 1974 (suspected) |
Country | United States |
State(s) | Washington |
Date apprehended | October 2, 1974 |
Imprisoned at | Airway Heights Corrections Center, Airway Heights, Washington |
Warren Leslie Forrest (born June 29, 1949) is an American convicted double murderer and suspected serial killer. Sentenced to two life terms for the murders of a young woman, Krysta Blake and teenage girl Martha Morrison in Clark County, Washington, in 1974, he is considered the prime suspect in at least five similar murders and disappearances dating back to 1971. Forrest has been incarcerated on a single murder count since 1974, and was convicted on another count on February 4, 2023, after DNA linked him to the murder of Martha Morrison. The jury took just an hour and a half to convict Forrest of 17-year-old Martha's murder.
Warren Forrest was born on June 29, 1949, in Vancouver, Washington, the younger of two brothers of parents Harold and Delores Forrest. He attended the Fort Vancouver High School and competed on the school's track and field team, of which he became the captain. After graduating in September 1967, Forrest and his older brother Marvin were drafted to fight in the Vietnam War, where the former served as a fire control crewman for the 15th Field Artillery Regiment at the Homestead Air Force Base in Homestead, Florida. [1]
After his discharge, he returned to Vancouver and married his high school sweetheart Sharon Ann Hart in August 1969; they had two children. Shortly after their marriage, they moved to Fort Bliss, Texas, and then to Newport Beach, California, where Forrest enrolled at the North American School of Conservation and Ecology. [2] However, he quickly lost interest in studying and dropped out at the end of the first term. In late 1970, Forrest and his wife moved to Battle Ground, Washington, where he found a job with the Clark County Parks Department. [3]
On October 2, 1974, Forrest was arrested on charges of kidnapping, rape and attempted murder. On the previous day, he had met a 20-year-old woman in Portland, Oregon and lured her into his car under the pretense of doing a photo shoot. [4] Instead, he drove to a city park and assaulted her, raping her several times, torturing her and shooting her with darts from an air-powered dart gun. Forrest then drove her to Camas, Washington, where he stabbed her six times with a knife near Lacamas Lake and attempted to strangle her.
The woman fell unconscious after the attack, and as Forrest believed she had died, he completely undressed her and threw her into some nearby bushes. [4] However, she woke up two hours later and managed to make her way to the city, where she was found by passers-by. She was driven to a nearby hospital and given emergency medical attention, and survived. Once in a stable condition, she provided a description of her assailant and the distinctive features of his car; according to her testimony, he drove a blue 1973 Ford van and had greeted several park employees while driving through the area. As the park was under the Parks Department's jurisdiction, police assumed that the perpetrator was an employee and started looking into their alibis.
The examination revealed that Forrest was absent from work on the day of the attack, being on sick leave. As he owned a 1973 blue Ford van and matched the perpetrator's description very well, police obtained a search warrant for his home and vehicle. While searching his home, officers found jewelry and clothing fragments that belonged to the 20-year-old who also conclusively identified him as her attacker once she was presented a photograph of him. Forrest was unable to provide himself with a convincing alibi, and was charged the same day.
Soon after his arrest was publicized, they were able to identify him as the kidnapper of a 15-year-old girl who stated that she had also been assaulted by Forrest. According to her testimony, on July 17, 1974, she was attempting to hitchhike out of Ridgefield and voluntarily got into Forrest's van after he offered her a ride. [4] Forrest raped and beat her, and after they reached the slopes of Tukes Mountain, she was bound, gagged and tied to a tree. Forrest intended to kill her, but she managed to chew through the gag and hide in nearby bushes until the morning, when she emerged and sought help. Despite her testimony, Forrest was solely charged with the kidnapping and attempted murder of the 20-year-old woman. [4] His legal team soon filed a motion for a psychiatric evaluation, which determined that Forrest was legally insane. He was thus acquitted by reason of insanity and ordered to undergo treatment at the Western State Hospital in Lakewood. [5]
On July 16, 1976, two Portland residents went to pick mushrooms and wildflowers in Tukes Mountain near Battle Ground, noticing a small brown shoe sticking out of some bushes. [6] When the mushroomers pulled on the shoe, they saw a skeletal leg and reported the find to the local police, who unearthed the half-skeletonized body of a young woman. [7] Forensic examination of the jaw led scientists to determine that the remains belonged to 20-year-old Krista Kay Blake, a hitchhiker who disappeared from Vancouver on July 11, 1974. [6] Witnesses claimed that prior to Blake's disappearance, she got into a 1973 blue Ford driven by a young white male whom the witnesses did not recognize. As Forrest had the same van, he came under suspicion in not only Blake's, but the disappearances and murders of at least six teenagers and young women who had been abducted from Clark County between 1971 and 1974. [3] Almost all of them hitchhiked and were seen entering a van before vanishing. A closer look at Blake's clothes led to the discovery of holes on her T-shirt, which investigators believed were made by a dart gun similar to the one Forrest used on the kidnapped 20-year-old woman. [8]
During the investigation, police determined that on the day Blake had disappeared, Forrest was not working and had no alibi. His mother claimed that he had spent part of the day at her house, but left early in the evening and did not return home until the following morning. Since Blake's clothes and bones showed no signs of stab wounds or bullet holes, the medical examiner concluded that she had likely been strangled. Forrest was charged on this basis with Blake's murder in 1978. [9] Although he had been detained at a mental institution, Forrest and his attorney Don Greig filed a petition for another examination, claiming that his mental state had improved greatly and that Forrest wanted to represent himself at trial. His request was granted, and Forrest was allowed to stand trial. [10] Initially, four judges that had been involved with Forrest's previous trials were disqualified on the grounds of being potentially biased either in favor of or against him. [10] This decision was eventually resolved, and Justice Robert McMullen was appointed as the trial judge. [11]
Forrest's trial began in early 1979, but a mistrial was declared after Forrest's attorney erroneously allowed a second dart gun unrelated to the case to be submitted as evidence. [9] Forrest's defense team filed a motion for a change of venue from Clark County to Cowlitz County, arguing that the publicity surrounding the murders would prejudice the jurors against their client. The motion was granted, and the trial resumed in April 1979 at a court in Cowlitz County. [12]
During the proceedings, Forrest pleaded not guilty, claiming that he had been on vacation to Long Beach with his wife and kids. [13] His alibi was confirmed by his mother, who said Forrest had been at home at the time when investigators supposed Blake had gotten into the van. [13] However, her testimony was deemed unreliable, as prosecutors pointed out that she had originally told investigators that her son left the house in the early evening and did not return until the following morning. [13] Forrest's wife Sharon also testified in his defense, although she admitted that their marriage had been rocky and that Forrest sometimes suffered from blackouts. Sharon insisted that Forrest had been with her the entire time and never showed any indication of being violent towards women. [13]
Multiple witnesses testified against Forrest, stating that he had been seen with the victim at different times and was acquainted with her. [14] Some of the witnesses' claims were questioned by the defense team, as two of the witnesses had given descriptions of the suspected killer's vehicle that did not match the one Forrest was using. [14]
At one hearing, Forrest's surviving victims took the stand and identified him as their assailant. Forrest himself had pleaded guilty to the kidnapping and attempted murder of the 20-year-old woman, claiming that he had done so while under the effects of PTSD, but categorically refused to admit guilt in the murder of Blake and the kidnapping of the 15-year-old. [5] The prosecutor's office, in turn, insisted that Forrest was guilty of all charges, as each crime matched his modus operandi . Forrest was ultimately found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment with a chance of parole. [8]
Following his conviction, he was transferred to the Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla. [15] Forrest filed an appeal in early 1982, but it was denied in October of that year. [16] He has filed numerous parole applications over the years, which have been unsuccessful due to the fact he was a suspect in other violent crimes. [3]
Since his initial convictions, Forrest has remained a suspect in multiple kidnappings, disappearances and murders committed in Clark County during the early-1970s. He has refused to cooperate with investigators. In 2017, at another parole hearing, Forrest confessed to murdering Krista Blake and to the initial kidnappings. [17] He stated that Blake had been deeply depressed at the time of her murder, as well as severely stressed and suffering from the effects of a mental illness, and claimed that he did not intend to kill her at first, but eventually did so because she attempted to escape. He also candidly confessed to a total of 16 crimes involving women between 1971 and 1974, ranging from voyeurism to murder. [17] In spite of this, he claimed that he had killed nobody else besides Blake, and that he was remorseful for his actions. Despite his admissions, his application was denied and he was prohibited from filing further appeals until March 2022. The Parole Board stated that he continued to pose a danger to society and made minimal progress in ameliorating his behavior. [17]
In December 2019, Forrest was charged with the murder of 17-year-old Martha Morrison, who went missing from Portland, Oregon in September 1974. [18] Her skeletal remains were discovered on October 12, 1974, in Clark County, eight miles from Tukes Mountain, where Krista Blake's body was found; however, authorities at the time were unable to positively identify Morrison and she was known simply as a Jane Doe. In 2010, Morrison's half-brother submitted a DNA sample to police in Eugene, Oregon. In 2014, investigators began examining physical evidence from Forrest's criminal case to determine if it could be used in unsolved crimes. [18]
Forensic experts from the Washington State Police Crime Lab isolated a partial DNA profile from bloodstains found on Forrest's dart gun and cross-referenced it with Morrison's DNA, leading to the positive identification of Morrison's remains. Consequently, Forrest was identified as Morrison's killer. [18] In January 2020, Forrest was extradited back to Clark County to await charges in Morrison's murder. On February 7, 2020, he pleaded not guilty. [19] The trial was scheduled to begin on April 6, but was delayed several times due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The trial resumed in early 2023, and on February 1, a jury found Forrest guilty of Morrison's murder. [20] Sixteen days later, he was handed down another life sentence. [21]
Besides Blake and Morrison, Forrest remains the prime suspect in the disappearances and murders of at least five teenagers and young women. In each case, the perpetrator exhibited a similar modus operandi to Forrest:
Paul John Knowles, also known as The Casanova Killer, was an American serial killer tied to the deaths of 18 people in 1974, though he claimed to have murdered at least 35.
Alison May Campbell Parrott was an 11-year-old girl who was lured out of her home by a male phone caller in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Her remains were found two days later in a densely wooded area of Kings Mill Park.
Randall Brent Woodfield is an American serial killer, serial rapist, kidnapper, robber, burglar and former football player who was dubbed the I-5 Killer or the I-5 Bandit by the media due to the crimes he committed along the Interstate 5 corridor running through Washington, Oregon and California. Before his capture, Woodfield was suspected of multiple sexual assaults and murders. Though convicted in only one murder, he has been linked to a total of 18 murders and is suspected of having killed up to as many as 44 people.
The "Zebra" murders were a string of racially motivated murders and related attacks committed by a group of four black serial killers in San Francisco, California, United States, from October 1973 to April 1974; they killed at least 15 white people and wounded eight others. Police gave the case the name "Zebra" after the special police radio band they assigned to the investigation.
Carol Mary Bundy was an American double murderer and suspected serial killer. Bundy and Doug Clark became collectively known as the Sunset Strip Killers after being convicted of a series of lust murders in Los Angeles during the late spring and early summer of 1980.
Ivan Robert Marko Milat, commonly referred to in media as the Backpacker Murderer, was an Australian serial killer who abducted, assaulted, robbed and murdered two men and five women in New South Wales between 1989 and 1992. His modus operandi was to approach backpackers along the Hume Highway under the guise of providing them transport to areas of southern New South Wales, then take his victims into the Belanglo State Forest where he would incapacitate and murder them. Milat is also suspected of having committed many other similar offences and murders around Australia.
Debra Louise Jackson, informally known as "Orange Socks" when unidentified, was an American murder victim who went unidentified for nearly 40 years before being identified through a DNA match with her surviving sister in 2019. Her murder is believed to have taken place on October 30 or 31, 1979 in Georgetown, Texas. Her body was found naked except for the pair of orange socks from which the nickname was derived. She had been strangled and was believed to have died only hours before the discovery.
Martha Marie Morrison was a 17-year-old American girl who was murdered in 1974, and whose remains went unidentified for over 40 years after their discovery.
Bernard Eugene Giles is an American convicted serial killer and rapist who murdered five girls and women in Titusville, Florida, in late 1973. After his arrest in December of that year, he fully admitted his guilt and was sentenced to serve several life imprisonment terms in 1974.
Paul Ezra Rhoades was an American spree killer and suspected serial killer convicted of three murders committed in Idaho during a three-week crime spree in 1987. He is the prime suspect in at least four additional killings in Utah and Wyoming dating back to 1984, however, he was never conclusively linked to these murders. He was executed for two of his confirmed murders in 2011, becoming the first person to be executed in Idaho in over seventeen years.
Gary Lee Schaefer is an American murderer, kidnapper, rapist and suspected serial killer thought to be responsible for the murders of three girls in Springfield, Vermont between 1979 and 1983. He confessed to two of these murders and remains a suspect in the third, but was convicted of only one, for which he received a 30-year-to-life sentence.
Thomas Warren Whisenhant was an American serial killer who murdered at least four women between 1963 and 1976 in Mobile County, Alabama. After being arrested for the October 1976 murder of Cheryl Payton, Whisenhant confessed to killing three other women. He was sentenced to death in Alabama in September 1977, and was executed in May 2010 at Holman Correctional Facility via lethal injection. At the time of his execution, Whisenhant was Alabama's longest serving death row inmate, spending thirty-two years, eight months and twenty days on death row.
Robert Leroy Biehler was an American serial killer who killed four people in various neighborhoods of Los Angeles, California from 1966 to 1974, either to cover up previous crimes or as part of contract murders. Unable to be sentenced to death due to Furman v. Georgia, Biehler was instead given four consecutive life terms, which he served until his death in 1993.
Anthony Joe LaRette Jr. was an American serial killer and rapist. Convicted of one murder in St. Charles, Missouri in 1980, he later confessed to thirty-one murders in eleven states dating back to the late 1960s, fifteen of which were closed based on information provided by him. Sentenced to death for his sole conviction, LaRette was executed in 1995.
Beoria Abraham Simmons II is an American serial killer and kidnapper who murdered two women and a teenage girl in Jefferson County, Kentucky, between 1981 and 1983. He was arrested after failing to kidnap a fourth victim, who later reported him to police. By the time of his capture, another man had been wrongfully imprisoned for one of his crimes.
Joseph Donald Ture Jr. is an American serial killer and kidnapper. Originally convicted of killing a woman in Sherburne County, Minnesota, in 1980, he was later linked to five additional murders, including the mass murder of a family in Clearwater, as well as numerous rapes. Following these revelations, he was given five additional life sentences, which he is currently serving at Minnesota Correctional Facility – Stillwater in Bayport, Minnesota.
William Perry Jackson is an American serial killer who, together with two accomplices, killed five people during robberies in Washington and Oregon from May to August 1980. Convicted and sentenced to multiple life terms in separate trials, in addition to another sentence for escaping from prison, he is currently serving his sentences in an Oregon prison.
The Great Basin Murders is the name given to a series of murders of at least nine women committed between 1983 and 1997 across the states of Wyoming, Utah, Nevada, and Idaho. It derives its name from the Great Basin geographical area, as most of the victims had their bodies dumped near interstate highways that transverse it.
Billy Lee Chadd is an American serial killer and rapist. Raised by two alcoholics, he began committing crimes at a young age, first getting into trouble with the law for a rape he committed when he was 15. Between 1974 and 1978, he raped and fatally stabbed two women in California. After being arrested for those crimes, he confessed to murdering a man at an apartment in Nevada and a male hitchhiker in Kansas, the latter claim never being verified. Initially sentenced to death for one of his murders, his sentence was appealed, and he was sentenced to life imprisonment at his retrial. He is now serving his sentences at a California state prison.