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Green River Killer begins life imprisonment
08:36 PM PST on Friday, December 19, 2003
SEATTLE — Convicted Green River serial killer Gary Ridgway now begins
serving 48 consecutive life sentences.
Ridgway is being held at the state prison in Shelton, Wash., and will
either be moved to Walla Walla or the Clallam Bay prison for his
long-term cell assignment. But the Green River Killer may get special
consideration because of his notoriety.
Ridgway has expressed fear for his future behind bars. And for good
cause. A number of relatives of women he killed openly wished at his
sentencing Thursday day that he be choked and strangled. His lawyers
have asked that he be kept away from the general prison population.
Prosecutors agreed to spare Ridgway the death penalty in exchange for his helping investigators find four previously undiscovered sets of remains and confessing to the murders, the most recent in 1998. Many were prostitutes or runaways, and the first victims turned up in the Green River, giving the killer his name. Ridgway was sentenced to life in prison without parole, but he still could face execution if tried and convicted of murder in another county. Other counties could also prosecute Ridgway Prosecutors and police in several counties are investigating whether Ridgway might be a suspect in unsolved murders. Lewis County, Wash., prosecutor Jeremy Randolf said now that King County has finished with him, he wants a crack at Ridgway. Three women found dead in Lewis County over the last 20 years apparently died Ridgway-style, said Randolf. All three were suspected of being prostitutes. One of Ridgway’s defense attorneys said he was confident that Ridgway did not commit any other crimes other than in King County. But the more Lewis County detectives looked into their unsolved murders, the more they thought of Ridgway. “They fit the time frame, they fit the occupations of the young ladies, similar to the occupations of his other victims,” said Randolf. But the death penalty wouldn’t loom for Ridgway in Lewis County, said Randolf. “If I know from the get-go that I’m going to be costing the Lewis County taxpayers and awful lot of money to go for the death penalty, knowing that it’s likely it will be overturned by the Supreme Court, that would be an improper act by me,” said Randolf. Meanwhile, police in the Tacoma area, Snohomish and Thurston counties are all looking to clear unsolved murders by pinning them on Ridgway. But the deal he struck with King County prosecutors will definitely make it harder to get any death penalty.
Pierce County prosecutors told King 5 News they will not rule out seeking the death penalty but at this point they have no case against Ridgway. Ridgway: 'I'm sorry' On Thursday, Ridgway, who terrorized Seattle in the early 1980s with the Green River murders, tearfully apologized for “killing all those young ladies” as a judge sentenced him to life in prison without the chance of release. Ridgway, 54, bowed his head during 48 seconds of silence the judge ordered for his 48 victims - the most of any killer in U.S. history. “I have tried to remember as much as I could to help the detectives find and recover the ladies. I’m sorry for the scare I put into the community,” said Ridgway. After blistering Ridgway for his lack of compassion for the horror he brought to his victims, their families and the community, King County Superior Court Judge Richard Jones imposed 48 consecutive life sentences one at a time. “The time has come for the final chapter of your reign of terror in our community,” Jones said. “It is now time for our community to have peace from the Green River murders.” Relatives of 21 of Ridgway’s victims spent four hours addressing the court and King County Superior Court Judge Richard Jones. One after another, relatives of victims poured out decades of pain, anger and loss as they confronted Ridgway. “Jesus knows you have broken my heart,” a sobbing Joan Mackie, mother of victim Cindy Smith, told Ridgway as he faced her and listened silently. Most of the relatives sobbed, some shook with anger as they tried to describe the inexpressible grief of having a mother, daughter or sister disappear at his hands. “It was not your right to decide who lived and who died,” said Tim Meehan, the brother of Mary Meehan, whose body was found Nov. 13, 1983. “Mary was no less a human being than your mother or your son, or as trash as you have classified all the victims.” “It’s garbage like you, not these victims that you took their lives, that doesn’t deserve to live on,” he said. “I can only hope that someday someone gets the opportunity to choke you unconscious 48 times so you can live through the horror that you put our mothers and our daughters through.” As each family member spoke of their sadness and rage, Ridgway maintained a blank stare, though he sometimes nodded at their comments and a few times, dabbed away a tear that slipped out beneath his dark-rimmed glasses. CLICK HERE to read more comments by family members. Ridgway, however, started crying as he listened to the father of one of the women he killed. A few forgive While he listened impassively to those who condemned him to hell, he cried when Robert Rule said, "I forgive you." His daughter, Linda Rule, was 16 when she was killed in 1982. Kathy Mills, the mother of victim Opal Mills, 16, whose body was found Aug. 15, 1982, was also among the few to offer Ridgway forgiveness. “We wanted to see you die, but it’s all going to be over now,” said Kathy Mills, “Gary Leon Ridgway, I forgive you. I forgive you. You can’t hold me anymore. I’m through with you. I have a peace that is beyond human understanding.”
The father of Linda Rule, Ridgway's 19th victim, has found the same peace. "Mr. Ridgway, there are people here in this room that hate you,” he said. “I am not one of them. I forgive you for what you've done." Rule said he's forgiven Ridgway because of his Christian faith. Both he and Mills believe Ridgway's tears were sincere when he broke down during both of their speeches. "I thought maybe there's some hope, maybe there is some feeling in him," said Mills. In his confession, Ridgway said he killed because he hated prostitutes and didn’t want to pay them for sex and that he killed so many women he had a hard time keeping them straight. J. Norman, the mother of Shawnda Leea Summers, whose body was found Aug. 11, 1983, said prosecutors should not have bargained with the death penalty to get Ridgway’s guilty plea. “The politicians, if they cared about this heinous crime, it would have been solved 20 years ago,” Norman said. “There shouldn’t have been no plea bargain. ... Shame on Seattle.” Reichert: Ridgway is ‘pure evil’ As he entered the courthouse for Ridgway’s sentencing, King County Sheriff Dave Reichert, one of the first detectives to investigate the killings in the early 1980s, said he wouldn’t put much credence in any remorse Ridgway might show. “I think that there is a piece of him that has always wanted to be cared for or loved or seen as a normal person,” Reichert said. “But he’s not been able to do that and so I think that’s his attempt at having somebody at least recognize he’s a human being and that he’d like to be treated as someone who’s a part of the community. Reichert said that's all an act, an attempt to be seen as a normal person. "He's a rapist, he's a murderer, he's a coward, and he's pure evil," said Reichert. "He's a monster, he's a killing machine. Period. The scary part is that he's not an alien. He didn't come from Mars. He came from right here in this community." Ridgway confesses to 48 murders Ridgway pleaded guilty Nov. 5 to 48 counts of aggravated first-degree murder. In his confession, Ridgway said he killed because he hated prostitutes and didn’t want to pay them for sex; that he dumped their bodies in the Green River and other inconspicuous parts of King County; and that he killed so many women he had a hard time keeping them straight. Ridgway was arrested Nov. 30, 2001, after detectives linked his DNA to sperm found in three of the earliest victims. By spring 2002, prosecutors had charged him with seven murders, but they had all but given up hope of linking him to the dozens of other women, most of whom disappeared during a terrifying stretch from 1982-84. Last spring, defense attorneys offered King County Prosecutor Norm Maleng a deal: If Maleng would not seek the death penalty, Ridgway would help solve those other cases. Though Maleng had previously said he would not bargain with the death penalty, he changed his mind, saying that a strong principle of justice is to know the truth. Ridgway cooperated, eventually confessing to 48 murders — the most recent in 1998 — and leading investigators to four previously undiscovered sets of remains. KING 5's Gary Chittim, KING5.com's Liza Javier, KING5.com's Ellen Liang, and the Associated Press contributed to this report.
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