[Are There More
Victims Are Out There? ]
On March 16, 2012, Israel Keyes was
arrested in Lufkin, Texas after he used a debit card that belonged to an
18-year-old Alaska woman that he killed and dismembered in February. During the
following months, while awaiting trial for the murder of Samantha Koenig, Keyes
confessed to seven other murders during more than 40 hours of interviews with
the FBI. Investigators believe there are at least three more victims and
possibly much more.
Early Influences
Keyes was born Jan. 7, 1978 in
Richmond, Utah to parents who were Mormon and home schooled their children.
When the family moved to Stevens County, Washington north of Colville, they
attended The Ark, a Christian Identity church which is known for racist and
anti-Semitic views. During that time, the Keyes family was friends and
neighbors with the Kehoe family. Israel Keyes was childhood friends of Chevie
and Cheyne Kehoe, known racists who were later convicted of murder and
attempted murder.
In The Military
Service
At age 20, Keyes joined the U.S. Army
and served at Fort Lewis, Fort Hood and in Egypt until he was honorably
discharged in 2000. At some point during his young adult years, he rejected
religion completely and proclaimed he was an atheist. Keyes life of crime had
begun before he joined the military, however. He admitted to raping a young
girl in Oregon sometime between 1996 and 1998 when he would have been 18 to 20
years old. He told FBI agents that he separated a girl from her friends and raped,
but not killed her. He told investigators that he planned to kill her, but
decided not to. It was the beginning of a long list of crimes, including
burglaries and robberies that authorities are now trying to piece together into
a timeline of Keyes' criminal career.
He Sets Up His Base
in Alaska
By 2007, Keyes established Keyes
Construction in Alaska and began working as a construction contractor. It was
from his base in Alaska that Keyes ventured out into almost every region of the
United States to plan and commit his murders. He traveled many times since
2004, looking for victims and setting up buried caches of money, weapons, and
tools needed to kill and dispose of the bodies. His trips, he told the FBI,
were not financed with money from his construction business, but from money he
got from robbing banks. Investigators are trying to determine how many bank
robberies that he may have been responsible for during his many trips across
the country. It is also unknown at what point Keyes escalated to committing
random murders. Investigators suspect it began 11 years before his arrest,
shortly after he left the military.
His Modus Operandi
According to Keyes, his usual routine
would be to fly to some area of the country, rent a vehicle and then drive
sometimes hundreds of miles to find victims. He would set up and bury murder
kits somewhere in the targeted area - stashing items like shovels, plastic
bags, money, weapons, ammunition and bottles of Drano, to help dispose of the
bodies. His murders kits have been found in Alaska and New York, but he
admitted to having others in Washington, Wyoming, Texas and possibly Arizona. He
would look for victims in remote areas like parks, campgrounds, walking trials,
or boating areas. If he was targeting a home he looked for a house with an
attached garage, no car in the driveway, no children or dogs, he told
investigators.
Finally, after committing the murder,
he would leave the geographic area immediately.
Keyes Makes Several Mistakes
In February 2012, Keyes broke his rules
and made two mistakes. First, he kidnapped and killed someone in his hometown,
which he had never done before. Secondly, he let his rental car be photographed
by an ATM camera while using a victim's debit card. On Feb. 2, 2012, Keyes
kidnapped 18-year-old Samantha Koenig who was working as a barista at one of
the many coffee stands around Anchorage. He was planning to wait for her
boyfriend to pick her up and kidnap both of them, but for some reason decided
against it and just grabbed Samantha. Koenig's abduction was caught on video,
and a massive search for her was conducted by authorities, friends, and family
for weeks, but she was killed shortly after she was abducted. He took her to a
shed at his Anchorage home, sexually assaulted her and strangled her to death.
He then immediately left the area and went on a two-week cruise, leaving her
body in the shed.
When he returned, he dismembered her
body and dumped it in Matanuska Lake north of Anchorage. About a month later,
Keyes used Koenig's debit card to get money from an ATM in Texas. The camera in
the ATM captured a picture of the rental car Keyes was driving, linking him to
the card and the murder. He was arrested in Lufkin, Texas on March 16, 2012.
Keyes Confesses To A
Few Murders
Keyes was originally extradited back
from Texas to Anchorage on credit card fraud charges. On April 2, 2012,
searchers found Koenig's body in the lake. On April 18, an Anchorage grand jury
indicted Keyes for the kidnapping and murder of Samantha Koenig. While awaiting
trial in the Anchorage jail, Keyes was interviewed for more than 40 hours by
Anchorage police detective Jeff Bell and FBI Special Agent Jolene Goeden.
Although he was not completely forthcoming with many details, he began to
confess to some of the murders that he committed over the past 11 years.
The Motive For Murder
The investigators tried to determine Keyes'
motive for the eight murders to which he confessed.
"There were just times, a couple
of times, where we would try to get a why," said Bell. "He would have
this term; he would say, 'A lot of people ask why, and I would be, like, why
not?' "
Keyes admitted to studying the tactics
of other serial killers, and he enjoyed watching movies about killers, such as Ted
Bundy, but he was careful to point out to Bell and Goeden that he used his
ideas, not those of other famous killers. In the end, the investigators
concluded that Keyes' motivation was very simple. He did it because he liked
it. "He enjoyed it. He liked what he was doing," Goeden said.
"He talked about getting a rush out of it, the adrenalin, the excitement
out of it."
His Trail of Murders
Keyes confessed to the murders of four
people in three different incidents in Washington state. He killed two
individuals, and he kidnapped and killed a couple. He didn't provide any names.
He probably knew the names, because he liked to return to Alaska and then
follow the news of his murders on the Internet. He also killed another person
on the East Coast. He buried the body in New York but killed the person in
another state. He would not give Bell and Goeden any other details of that
case.
The Currier Murders
On June 2, 2011, Keys flew to Chicago,
rented a car and drove almost 1,000 miles to Essex, Vermont. He targeted the
home of Bill and Lorraine Currier. He conducted what he called a
"blitz" attack on their home, tied them up and took them to an abandoned
house. He shot Bill Currier to death, sexually assaulted Lorraine and then
strangled her. Their bodies were never found.
He Led A Double Life
Bell believes the reason that Keyes
gave them more details about the Currier murders was because he knew they had
evidence in that case pointing to him. So he opened up more about those murders
than he did the others. "It was chilling to listen to him. He was clearly
reliving it to a degree, and I think he enjoyed talking about it," Bell
said. "A couple of times, he would kind of chuckle, tell us how weird it
was to be talking about this." Bell believes their interviews with Keyes
were the first time he had ever talked with anyone about what he referred to as
his "double life." He thinks Keyes held back details of his other
crimes because he didn't want members of his family to know anything about his
secret life of crime.
And More Victims?
During the interviews, Keyes referred
to other murders in addition to the eight to which he confessed. Bell told
reporters that he thinks Keyes committed less than 12 murders. However, in
trying to piece together a timeline of Keyes' activities, the FBI released a
list of 35 trips that Keyes made across the country from 2004 to 2012, in hopes
that the public and local law enforcement agencies could match up bank robberies,
disappearances and unsolved murders to times when Keyes was in the area.
'All The Talk Is Over,
Suicide His Way Out'
On Dec. 2, 2012, Israel Keyes was found
dead in his Anchorage jail cell. He had cut his wrists and strangled himself
with a rolled up bedsheet. Under his body was a blood-soaked, four-page letter
written on yellow legal pad paper in both pencil and ink. Investigators could
not make out the writing on Keyes suicide note until the letter was enhanced at
the FBI lab. An analysis of the enhanced letter concluded that it contained no
evidence or clues, but was merely a "creepy" Ode to Murder, written
by a serial killer who loved to kill. "The FBI concluded there was no
hidden code or message in the writings," the agency said in a news
release. "Further, it was determined that the writings do not offer any
investigative clues or leads as to the identity of other possible
victims." We may never know how many people Israel Keyes killed.
The
Travels of Serial Killer Israel Keyes
When confessed serial killer Israel
Keyes took his own life in an Anchorage jail cell, he had confessed to the
murders of eight people. FBI investigators believe Keyes had at least three
more victims and possibly many others. While he was being held for trial for
the murder of Samantha Koenig, who disappeared Feb. 1, 2012 from an Anchorage
coffee stand where she worked, Keyes was interviewed for more than 40 hours by
FBI investigators. Keyes told his interviewers that he would fly into a city
around the U.S., rent a vehicle and then drive hundreds of miles to locate his
victims. He also made trips to hide weapons caches or body disposal kits in
locations around the country.
To try to discover other possible
victims, the FBI put together this timeline listing his trips, grouped by
region, which Keyes made to see if local law enforcement agencies could link
any unsolved murders to visits Keyes made to their region.
Trip
Made By Israel Keyes
Using Keyes' financial and travel
records, the FBI has created the following timeline:
- Oct.
5, 2004, to Oct. 16, 2004: Eastern U.S.
- April
20, 2005, to April 25, 2005: Washington state, Canada's British Columbia
- May
10, 2006, to May 15, 2006: Western U.S.
- Sept.
1, 2006, to Sept. 7, 2006: Alaska
- Oct.
21, 2006, to Oct. 23, 2006: Western U.S., Mexico
- Nov.
8, 2006, to Nov. 16, 2006: Alaska
- Feb.
5, 2007, to Feb. 8, 2007: Southwest U.S.
- March
1, 2007, to March 9, 2007: Washington, Canada (drove to Alaska)
- April
24, 2007, to May 4, 2007: Western U.S., Mexico
- Aug.
26, 2007, to Sept. 6, 2007: Western U.S.
- Oct.
29, 2007, to Nov. 2, 2007: Western U.S.
- Nov.
12, 2007, to Nov. 13, 2007: Western U.S.
- Dec.
4, 2007, to Dec. 17, 2007: Midwest U.S. and Western U.S.
- Dec.
18, 2007 to Jan. 4, 2008: Western U.S. and Southern Canada
- Jan.
5, 2008, to Jan. 8, 2008: Western U.S.
- Jan.
28, 2008, to Feb. 15, 2008: Southern U.S. and Western U.S.
- May
11, 2008 to May 17, 2008: Western U.S.
- July
3, 2008, to July 7, 2008: Western U.S.
- Sept.
16, 2008, to Sept. 24, 2008: Western U.S.
- Oct.
24, 2008, to Nov. 5, 2008: Southwest U.S., Midwest U.S. and Western U.S.
- Nov. 7,
2008 to Dec. 9, 2008: Hawaii
- Dec.
11, 2008, to Dec. 25, 2008: Mexico
- Feb.
23, 2009, to Feb. 27, 2009: Western U.S.
- Mar. 6,
2009 to Mar. 26, 2009: Western U.S.
and Southern Canada
- April
1, 2009, to April 14, 2009: Eastern U.S., Western U.S.
- Sept.
11, 2009, to Oct. 3, 2009: Southern U.S.
- Dec.
17, 2009, to Dec. 29, 2009: Southern U.S.
- Jan.
11, 2010, to Feb. 25, 2010: Western U.S.
- March
1, 2010, to March 10, 2010: Western U.S.
- April
24, 2010, to April 30, 2010: Western U.S.
- May
19, 2010, to July 18, 2010: Midwest U.S. and Western U.S.
- July
18, 2010, to July 22, 2010: Southwest U.S.
- Oct.
15, 2010, to Oct. 25, 2010: Midwest U.S., Eastern U.S.
- June
2, 2011, to June 16, 2011: Midwest U.S., Eastern U.S.
- Sept.
15, 2011, to Sept. 25, 2011: Western U.S.
- Feb.
2, 2017, to Feb. 18, 2012: Southern U.S.
- March
6, 2012, to March 13, 2012: Southwestern and Southern U.S.
Authorities have already recovered two of Keyes' murder caches,
one in Alaska and one in New York. They contained money, weapons and items that
could be used to dispose of bodies. Keyes told the FBI that there were other
supply boxes buried in other locations
- bird