Welcome To My Blog. I respect and appreciate comments, questions, information and theories you might have. Even if i agree with you or not, i won't delete your comments as long as they are not purposefully attacking anyone. I will not condone bullying of any kind. If you that is your intent, don't bother posting because i will delete it the moment i see it.

Saturday, July 21, 2018

The Tube Sock Killings

The Mineral, Washington murders, also known as "the Tube Sock Killings".

A series of unsolved murders that occurred in remote areas of Lewis and Pierce County, Washington, near the remote community of Mineral, Washington, in 1985.


Harkins and Cooper
August 10, 1985, Steven Harkins, 27, and his girlfriend, Ruth Cooper, 42, left their Tacoma, Washington home for a weekend camping trip at Tule Lake in Yelm, Pierce County.

 When the two did not return to their jobs the following Monday, their families reported them missing.

Four days later, hikers passing through Pierce County found Harkins' body near a remote campsite. 

He had been shot in the head.

His body was still in a sleeping bag.

This suggested he had been murdered while sleeping.

 Nearby, searchers also found Harkins' and Cooper's pet dog, who had been shot to death as well.

At the time, law enforcement suspected that the case may have been connected to the murders of Edward Smith and Kimberly Diane La Vine.

 They were a couple from Kent, Washington who were abducted, murdered, and disposed of in a gravel pit near the Columbia River in March 1985.

October 26, a skull was found at the dead end near Harts Lake, about 1.5 miles from where Harkins' body was found.

 Dental records confirmed the skull belonged to Cooper.

Two days later, her body and her purse were also recovered from the area, fifty feet from where her skull had been found.

 A tube sock had been tied around her neck.

According to the autopsy, she had died of "homicidal violence".


Riemer and Robertson
Over a month after the discovery of Ruth Cooper, on December 12, 1985, Mike Riemer, 36, his girlfriend, Diana Robertson, 21, and their daughter, Crystal Louise Robertson, age 2, traveled from their Tacoma home to Pierce County.

They planned to find a Christmas tree near the Nisqually River.

Riemer, an animal trapper, also planned to check on traps he had set in the area.

Later that evening, customers at a Kmart store thirty miles north found the couple's daughter, Crystal, standing outside the store entrance.

Crystal was placed in temporary foster care until her maternal grandmother saw her photograph on a local news broadcast two days later.

When asked where her mother was, the two-year-old told her grandmother that her "Mommy was in the trees."

Police searched the area both on foot and by air, looking for evidence of Riemer's red 1982 Plymouth pickup truck to no avail.

On February 18, 1986, the body of Diana Robertson was discovered half-buried in snow by a motorist near a logging road off of Washington State Route 7 in Mineral.

Bloodhounds scoured the area in the following days.

Six inches of snowfall impeded the search.

Riemer's pickup truck was found near Robertson's body.

In the truck, police discovered a note on the dashboard that read "I love you, Diana." 

It was written on a manila envelope.

Robertson's mother claimed the handwriting was that of Riemer.

Bloodstains were also found on the seat of the truck.

An autopsy revealed that Diana Robertson had been stabbed seventeen times.

She was also found with a tube sock tied around her neck, as that of Ruth Cooper.

Due to Riemer's disappearance, investigators believed he may have been responsible for Robertson's murder.

That he had abandoned his daughter at the Kmart store and then subsequently fled.

Police theorized that Riemer may have been responsible for Harkins' and Cooper's murders as well.

In February 1986, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer published an article revealing that Riemer had been charged with domestic assault against Robertson on October 19, 1985.

The couple had reconciled by December, the month in which they disappeared.

DEVELOPMENT 
On March 26, 2011, hikers discovered a partial human skull later determined to be that of Mike Riemer. 

It was found in an area within a mile of where Robertson's body had been discovered in 1986.

After recovery of the skull, Lewis County investigators stated that they believed Riemer could have been a possible victim of homicide as well, though his cause of death could not be determined.

Based on the condition of the skull, authorities were able to rule out a gunshot wound to the head.


Possible Related Murder

Edward Smith and Kimberly Dianne LaVine
On Saturday, March 9, 1985, the couple wanted to get away for the weekend.

Their plan was to travel three hours away to Grant County, Washington on I-90 and explore the beautiful surroundings and well-known tourist landmarks in the area. 

The following afternoon, the deceased body of Edward Smith was found in a gravel pit near the Wanapum Dam.

Edward's wallet and any form of identification were absent. 

His hands had been bound behind his back and he had been killed by having his throat slashed. 

Kimberly was nowhere to be found. 

March 11, 1985, Edward and Kimberly's employers called the Kings County Sheriff's Department when they didn't arrive to work that morning or pick up their phone after several attempts of contact.
A missing person(s) investigation ensued.

Nothing pivotal sprouted up until two weeks later when Edward and Kimberly's vehicle was found abandoned ten miles away from where his body was located. 
The car and body of Edward matched descriptions given.

The authorities were on high alert to locate Kimberly with not a lot of optimism.

They did manage to obtain a single fingerprint on the vehicle that didn't belong to the couple.

August of 1985, Kimberly's skeletal remains were discovered two miles away from where her fiance Edward was found.

In 1989, the single fingerprint found on Edward's car was matched with a truck driver named Billy Ray Ballard Jr. 
He had been serving time on a separate charge in Wyoming State Penitentiary. 

With the fingerprint belonging to Ray, he was extradited to Washington State and plead guilty to the murder of Edward Smith and Kimberly LaVine.

I couldn't find anywhere anything stating the police asked Edward about the other murders.

Who do you think did it?
Do you think that Billy Ray Committed all the murders?
Or perhaps it was an unknown serial killer that did the others? 
Or was Mike Riemer that did he other murders all along and he killed himself or succumbed to the elements?

Patti Krieger, Murdered or Just Missing?

Patricia "Patti" Krieger
65 year old Skagit County, Washington resident, Patricia "Patti" Krieger reportedly went missing on Saturday, October 2nd, 2010 while hiking on Sauk Mountain


She was with her beloved dog, Bear, who is described as a 100lb Rottweiler.

She went with her boyfriend, Larry Pressley, and five people who are described as friends/family, to scatter ashes of Larry's parents that passed away a few weeks earlier.

According to Pressley and their companions Krieger became very emotional. 

She and her dog separated from their group and started down the wrong trail.


Accounts vary at this point.


At any rate Krieger and Bear took a different trail and the companions assumed they'd all meet at the trailhead on the base of the mountain, so they continued on their way. 

Once they reached the trailhead they quickly realized Krieger was not there, nor coming down any of the incoming trails.

After Learning that their 65 year old Friend, Patti Krieger, had not made it back to the trail head, the hikers Patti was with decided not to wait for her and instead, left the mountain.

Larry Pressley went with some of the other hikers to a local gas station and bought burritos and beer. 

Some of the other hikers went to a local supermarket and went grocery shopping.


4 hours later, Larry and some of his friends went back to Sauk Mountain and at that time, reported Patti missing.

They pretended to be her family, so her actual family was not notified at that time.


According to her son he was not alerted to her missing status until the next day, a Sunday, when she didn't show up for her job. 

She had worked for Fred Meyer's for thirty years and when she was absent her boss immediately called her and then her son.

Her son after not being able to contact his mother went to file a police report and found that one had already been opened the day before.

Patti Krieger and Bear were officially missing.

Within 48hrs search teams for four counties arrived and by foot searched the mountain and trails with no results.

The day after a helicopter search was started using thermal imaging with no results.

Search and Rescue dogs were used at some point within the first 48hrs.

They hit on the parking lot and on the main trail, which lead Police to believe she had in fact gotten off the mountain, perhaps after her group had left.


By 10/4 the police had officially stated they did not believe she was on the mountain.

They found that Krieger had no personal items on her except her hearing aids. 

Various members of the group turned out to have her personal items such as Driver's license, wallet, and car keys. 

Her cellphone was later found to be at Pressley's house in possession of a friend.

26 days after she disappears Bear is found in poor condition, malnourished and emaciated in the area of Sauk Mountain.

After her dog was found, police changed their theory, believing that she may not have left the mountain.


Her son, friends, and family of Krieger believe that she is deceased and still regularly search the mountain for her remains.

Pressley is a felon, K5 News states that he had been sentenced previously for "child rape, drive by shooting, and assualt on police officers". 

We do know that he is one of the last people to see Krieger alive.

Krieger's son, Alan Patterson, stated that two days after Krieger had gone missing he was aiding in the search when along Sauk Mountain Road (not the trail) he encountered Pressley, who thus far had not aided in the search of Krieger. 

He claimed Pressley was acting suspiciously.


Larry Pressley has been very non-cooperative with the family; he was very upset when they started a Facebook page after her disappearance and confronted the family about it, when he found out a longtime friend/coworker of Krieger was running it he confronted him as well. 


He was also seen many times driving Krieger's luxury vehicles around town as opposed to his own vehicle.

The family was having a court dispute over their rights to Krieger's house and belongings. 

Pressley decided to vacate the house. 

When the family finally gained entrance, Krieger's house and belongings were "trashed". 

Titles to her cars were left out on kitchen counters, her safe and safety deposit box had been opened and rifled through with items missing. 

The family moved Krieger's vehicles to another location where they were involved in a drive-by shooting, they believe Pressley to be behind this.

Less than a year after Krieger's disappearance Pressley was married to another woman.

He is currently serving ten years in prison for charges unrelated to Krieger's disappearance.
A relative of Pressley was given Krieger's show-model Nova after her disappearance.

Supposedly the relative has referred to the vehicle as "hush money".

A girlfriend to the above relative gave conflicting stories to the police her after Krieger's disappearance. 

She broke up with the relative shortly after Krieger's disappearance, and committed suicide in 2013, leaving behind a child.





Missing Boy Scout Garrett Bardsley

Garrett Bardsley
8:00 AM on August 20, 2004, at the Uinta Mountains in Summit County, Utah. 

Garrett Bardsley and his father, Kevin, got up early on their father-son Boy Scout camping trip and went fishing on the edge of a nearby lake. 

Garrett got his shoes and socks soaked. 

He decided to walk back to the campsite to change.

The Scout troop tents were a mere 450 ft away.

Garrett’s father allowed his 12-year-old son to go back alone. 

They had walked that trail several times before.

Garrett had also completed wilderness survival training. 

Kevin kept his eyes on Garrett as he walked around the lake and even shouted directions, reminding Garrett which path would lead him straight back to camp.

After 20 minutes, Kevin wondered what was taking his son so long. 

He returned to the camp, and Garrett was nowhere to be seen.

The only evidence that searchers found was the Garrett’s Nike sock 0.5 mi away from the spot where he disappeared. 

Authorities believe the boy may have become disoriented on his way back to camp.

 It would be in line with the assumption that he sought shelter in the cold weather, maybe by going into the boulder field for a crevasse or outcropping.

Temperatures plummeted to near 18 degrees at night. 

The local police decided that there was not enough evidence pointing to a kidnapping. 

They believe that he got lost and died of exposure. 

In 2006, Kevin Bardsley was interviewed and gave vivid details about the day his son disappeared. 

He says that he will never give up hope of finding his son.




Nixon was attacked, Oscar Wilde's Kisses, and Truman's Classified Briefings.

THAT TIME THAT NIXON WAS ATTACKED
In 1958, on a trip through Latin America, vice president Nixon's car was attacked by an angry crowd and nearly turned over, while he was traveling through Venezuela.

The crowd was angry about some of the us cold war policies.

Nixon was on a goodwill trip.


By 1958, relations between the United States and Latin America had reached their lowest point in years.



Latin American argued that their countries needed more basic economic assistance, not more arms to repel communism.

They also questioned the American support of dictatorial regimes in Latin America simply because those regimes claimed to be anticommunist.

The U.S. awarded the Legion of Merit medal to Venezuelan dictator Marcos Perez Jimenez in 1954; Jimenez was overthrown by a military coup early in 1958.

The trip began with Nixon engaging in loud and bitter debates with student groups during his travels through Peru and Uruguay. 



In Caracas, Venezuela, however, things took a dangerous turn. 



A large crowd of angry Venezuelans who shouted anti-American slogans stopped Nixon’s motorcade through the capital city. 

They attacked the car, damaged its body and smashed the windows.

Inside the vehicle, Secret Service agents covered the vice president and at least one reportedly pulled out his weapon. 

They escaped from the crowd and sped away. In Washington, President Eisenhower dispatched U.S. troops to the Caribbean area to rescue Nixon from further threats if necessary. 


OSCAR WILDE'S KISSES
19th century poet and writer, Oscar Wilde's tomb is covered in thousands of lipstick kiss marks left by years of fans, that visit his grave in Paris France.

The epitaph is a verse from The Ballad of Reading Gaol:

"And alien tears will fill for him
Pity's long-broken urn,
For his mourners will be outcast men,
And outcasts always mourn."

In 2011 a glass barrier was erected to make the monument 'kiss proof'.



TRUMAN'S CLASSIFIED BRIEFINGS 
Harry S. Truman, America's 33rd president, was born on May 8, 1884, in Lamar, Missouri.

President Truman inherited the presidency 82 days after being vice president.


He succeeded Franklin D. Roosevelt, upon his death on April 12, 1945.

1947, the president had a new foreign policy in the making. 

In its later stages it was called "Containment" and was aimed at blocking Communist expansion anywhere in the world.

The Marshall Plan and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) were the major manifestations of containment and committed the United States to a role of world leadership it had never before been willing to assume.

FDR's condition was a closely held secret, and he had not prepared Truman for ascension to the presidency.

He was the president that started the tradition of top secret intelligence briefings in 1952.



He wanted to make sure that his successor was better prepared than he was.



He offered classified briefings to each of the nominees and it is a tradition that is still practiced today.



Shortly after the Allies achieved victory in Europe, Truman was faced with a tough decision.

 He decided to drop the first atomic bombs on Imperial Japan.


The two bombs ultimately killed more than 200,000 people.



Truman struggled through the Korean War.

He faced a frustrated and angry Congress that was beginning to threaten impeachment proceedings against him. 

He declined to run for president again in 1952 and returned home. 

Truman died in Kansas City, Missouri, on Dec 26, 1972.

DID YOU KNOW..
Harry's parents could not decide on his middle name, but since both final alternatives began with "S," the Trumans adopted the middle initial by itself.

Truman wanted to attend West Point, but was not accepted because of poor eyesight. 

He did join the Missouri National Guard in 1905.


World War I, he served in the U.S. Army as an artillery battery commander in France.



He married his childhood sweetheart, Elizabeth Virginia ("Bess") Wallace.

He opened a men's clothing store, which failed.

Harry and Bess had one daughter, Mary Margaret.

He helped integrate the military.



Truman's Fair Deal program managed to extend Social Security to 10 million additional people, provided flood control, and raised the minimum wage to 75 cents an hour, but failed to win national health insurance and more assistance for farmers.


GARAGE MAHAL
There is a museum called the Art Car Museum in Houstin Texas.

it is filled with ornately painted, decorated vehicles.

It is also known as Garage Mahal
It opened in 1998.

It features a bunch of different automobiles ranging from hippie vans to police cars.



STAR MUSEUM
There is a large fort in the shape of a star that is located in a village in Groningen, Netherlands.

IT was build in 1593.

It's original purpose was to control the only road between Germany and the city of Groningen.

Controlled by Spaniards during the time of the 80 years war.

Now it's used as a museum


LETTERS FROM SPACE
About 1 month before Apollo 11 was set to launch, Buzz Aldrin, Neil Armstrong and Michael Collins signed hundreds of envelopes as a form of life insurance for their families.

They gave them to friends and on important days like the day they landed on the moon, their friend gave them to their families, if  they did not return from the moon their families could sell them.

Armstrong's envelopes have spent decades as a family heirloom. 

Now they're giving one away for a good cause. 

The family donated the envelope to be auctioned off to support the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation.

This is the first time one of the envelopes has been offered up by the Armstrong estate.

Previous envelopes have sold for thousands of dollars at auction.



Aurora mass shooting, Did Holmes work alone?


On July 20, 2012, a mass shooting occurred inside in Theater 9 at the Century 16 movie theater in Aurora, Colorado, during a midnight screening of the film The Dark Knight Rises. 

12 were killed and 70 others injured.
WHAT HAPPENED
Police said Holmes bought a ticket, entered the theater, and sat in the front row. 

Then about 20 minutes into the film, he left the theater through an emergency exit door beside the movie screen.

He propped the door slightly open with a plastic tablecloth holder.

The massacre in Aurora began when 24-year-old James Holmes, dressed in tactical gear, reentered theater at 12:30 a.m., through a parking lot exit door and threw gas canisters into the theater. 

Holmes set off tear gas grenades and shot into the audience with multiple firearms. 

He was listening to techno music through a set of headphones so the reactions in the theater could not be heard.

Some audience members to initially thought he was performing a stunt for the film, a Batman sequel eagerly anticipated by fans.

Holmes opened fire at the audience, shooting people at random.

At the time, the attack had the largest number of casualties in one shooting in modern U.S. history.

It was the deadliest shooting in Colorado since the Columbine High School massacre in 1999. 

Holmes was arrested in his car outside the cinema minutes later. 

He put up no resistance.

Law enforcement agents evacuated buildings near Holmes’ Aurora apartment after he told them he had booby-trapped his home with explosive devices.

They were defused by the Arapahoe County Sheriff's Office Bomb Squad a day after the shooting.

Holmes confessed to the shooting but pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. 

Arapahoe County prosecutors sought the death penalty for Holmes.

The trial began on April 27, 2015. 

When Holmes made his first appearance in court, his hair was dyed neon orange and he seemed dazed and emotionless.

Investigators learned that in the months leading up to the shooting, Holmes had acquired weapons from Colorado gun shops and ordered thousands of rounds of ammunition online.

Court documents later revealed that a month before the shooting, a University of Colorado psychiatrist who had treated Holmes reported to campus police that he could be a danger to the public and had threatened her.

During the trial his notebook was entered into evidence.

Holmes' notebook elaborated on his obsession to kill since ten years prior to the shooting and his dissatisfaction with life and finding work, as well as health issues.

It also had details of planning for the shooting.

On July 16, Holmes, who has offered no motive for the shooting spree,was convicted of 24 counts of first-degree murder, 140 counts of attempted first-degree murder, and one count of possessing explosives. 

On August 7, he was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. 

On August 26, he was given twelve life sentences, one for every person he killed; he also got 3,318 years for the attempted murders of those he wounded and for rigging his apartment with explosives.

It was the deadliest mass shooting in Colorado since the 1999 Columbine shooting, in which 12 high school students and a teacher were murdered.
VICTIMS
Jonathan Blunk age 26, John Larimer age 27, Matt McQuinn age 27, and Alexander Teves age 24, died protecting their girlfriends.

Gordon Cowden age 51, died saving the lives of his two teenage daughters.

Seven weeks earlier, Jessica Ghawi (a.k.a. Jessica Redfield, a sports journalist, age 24 while on vacation, left the food court minutes prior to the Toronto Eaton Centre shooting.

Other Victims that died
Alexander J. Boik, age 18
Jesse Childress, age 29
Micayla Medek, age 23
Veronica Moser-Sullivan, age 6
Alex Sullivan, age 27
Rebecca Wingo, age 31

Seriously injured victims
Ashley Moser, Veronica Moser-Sullivan's mother, suffered critical injuries after being shot in the chest and was rendered a paraplegic.
She was pregnant at the time and miscarried a week after the attack.

Caleb Medley, the last victim discharged, left University Hospital on September 12.
He had serious brain damage and an injury to his right eye from a shotgun blast to the head, and underwent three brain surgeries.
He required a feeding tube, had severely impaired movement, and could no longer speak.

One of the survivors, Zack Golditch, did not let the incident deter him from following his dream of playing football.
He is 23 years old now.
“I never stopped and realized this is part of my story. I shouldn't push that away, because what I hold on to right now is a story, not just about myself, but about of everyone else. I can carry that and represent them through what I do and how I carry myself,” Golditch said. “I have to embrace it.”
He was in Theater 8 during the shooting. 
He was hit by one of the bullets that came through the wall.
The bullet made a clean entry and exit through Golditch’s neck, narrowly missing any crucial arteries, vertebrae and Golditch’s skull.
Surviving the Aurora shooting helped Golditch commit to helping others. He frequently visited the Boys and Girls Club and Colorado Children’s Hospital in Aurora and participated in a service trip to Jamaica with other CSU athletes.
“I was a 17-year-old kid going to see a movie, next thing you know I might not have come home that night. 
For me to still be able to play football, to be able to be a normal person and an able-bodied person is great,” Golditch said.
“I take nothing for granted. This opportunity to continue to live my life today is amazing.”


CONSPIRACY THEORIES
Holmes was found in his locked car with a gas mask on.
According to police radio transmissions, an officer found "a suspect in a gas mask".

Another officer asked "Is that the dude in the white car you're by?" 

Some say he was heavily drugged. 

Theorists say that this would have forced first responders to break the passenger side window and get a white stretcher board in preparation to transport him.

More police transmissions make theorists suspect more than one shooter.

Three minutes after Holmes was detained in his car, an officer says: "One of the shooters might be wearing a white and blue plaid shirt" and the dispatcher responds "Copy, outstanding shooter possibly wearing a white and blue plaid shirt."

An officer says "The suspect is saying that he's the only one but I'm getting conflicting suspect descriptions from the witnesses out here."

Then, the dispatcher receives several updates and says: "Copy, all units ... male with a red backpack and another one possibly in black clothing headed toward Alameda" Avenue.

Then an officer says: "Suspect is going to be male, unknown race, black camo-type outfit, believed to be wearing a vest, gas mask and multiple long guns." 

Officer: "Talking to people making statements, sounds like we have possibly 2 shooters, one that was in Theater 8 seated, another one that came in from the outside into Theater 9. Sounds like it was a coordinated attack."

Dispatch: "Every unit, possible 2nd shooter still at large... Keep the media away from them."

More unexplained things.

The orange duffel bag, gas can and ballistic gear found at a different part of the parking lot.

Authorities say they found a 100-round, drum-style ammo clip in the rifle used by Holmes.

Conspiracy Theorists think that the rifle found outside of the Theater 9 emergency exit appears to have a normal clip.

There was a second gas mask found at the far end of the parking lot, hundreds of feet from Theater 9's emergency exit and Holmes' car.

Arapahoe County Court judge has granted a request to seal the case against Holmes after the prosecutors argued that disclosing the court records would be "contrary to public interest" and "could jeopardize the ongoing investigation."