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Bruce Lindahl (criminal)

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Bruce Lindahl
Born(1953-01-29)January 29, 1953
DiedApril 4, 1981(1981-04-04) (aged 28)
Details
Victims3 murders confirmed
12+ murders suspected
Span of crimes
1974–1981
CountryUnited States
State(s)Illinois

Bruce Everitt Lindahl (January 29, 1953 – April 4, 1981) was an American serial killer and rapist who committed a series of rapes and murders in the late 1970s and early 1980s. In 2020, Lindahl was connected to the death of 16-year-old Pamela Maurer, who was killed on January 13, 1976, in DuPage County, Illinois, and in 2024, DNA evidence linked him to the murder of Kathy Halle in Illinois in March 1979. He has been declared a suspect in at least 12 murders and nine rapes committed in different Chicago suburbs from 1974 to 1981.[1]

After Lindahl's death, one of his surviving victims contacted the authorities and identified him as her attacker. DuPage County Police later stated that further DNA testing would be conducted with the aid of the Chicago Police Department, to determine whether Bruce Lindahl was involved in at least ten other killings.[2]

Biography

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Bruce Everitt Lindahl was born on January 29, 1953, in St. Charles, Illinois, to Jerome and Arlene Lindahl.[3] Lindahl graduated from Downers Grove North High School.[4] He attended college and graduated in the mid-1970s with a degree in electromechanics. The next few years, he worked as an electrician, while studying additionally at the Midvalley Vocational Center in Kaneville. In his free time, Lindahl was fond of parachuting and racquetball, with his friends and acquaintances speaking extremely positively of him, despite the fact that he easily fell into states of irresistible impulses and occasionally showed aggressive behavior towards others. In December 1976, he was arrested for possession of marijuana, but did not appear to be intoxicated.[5]

Lindahl died from loss of blood, as a result of accidentally cutting one of his leg arteries while attacking a man, possibly as a prelude to abducting and killing the man's girlfriend.[6]

Criminal history

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Since 1974, Lindahl committed many minor offenses and was repeatedly arrested, but each time, the court gave him only fines. During this time period, he changed residences on several occasions. Over the years, he lived in Chicago and its various suburbs, before moving to Aurora in 1978.

Assaults

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  • On March 6, 1979, on the pretext of selling marijuana, Lindahl lured 20-year-old Annette Lazar into his Aurora home, where he raped her under the threat of a gun. He later released her after she gave him feigned consent to continue further intimate relationships, after which Lazar contacted the police. However, since she had left him her phone number and the house where she was raped belonged to a police officer Dave Torres, who was a friend of Lindahl, her testimony was reportedly discounted and Lindahl was not charged.[7]
  • On December 22, Lindahl attacked a 30-year-old woman in northern Aurora, after she refused to provide him with sexual services in exchange for money. Since there were several witnesses, Lindahl hurried to leave the scene without causing serious harm to the victim. The injured woman contacted police, and during the interrogation was presented with photographs of various criminals for visual identification. As Lindahl was not among them, the victim instead picked out another man with a similar appearance.[8]
  • On January 28, 1981, Lindahl was convicted of illegally tapping and recording other people's phone calls to extort them. While they were trying to detain him, he aimed a shotgun at a police officer. After his arrest, he was charged with resisting arrest, illegal possession of weapons, and assault, but was again released on bail, and remained free during the preliminary investigation.[8]
  • On an unspecified date, Lindahl was driving when he was pulled over by the police. The police discovered an unconscious woman bleeding from a deep gash in her head. They asked him what he was doing, and he claimed that he was taking her to the hospital, although he was going in the wrong direction. An ambulance took the woman to the hospital, where an examination revealed she had been sexually assaulted. The woman stated that she did not remember what happened after Lindahl gave her a sip of something at a party. No charges were ever filed.[6]

Confirmed and suspected murders

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  • In 1993, the criminal case of 16-year-old Pamela Maurer, who was killed in January 1976, resumed.[9] Maurer was a junior at Downers Grove South High School who had gone to a friend's house in Lisle, Illinois on the night of January 12, 1976. At 9:45 p.m. that night, Pamela went out to buy a soda at a nearby McDonald's but she never returned. The next day, a passer-by noticed a purse with Pamela's identification on the side of College Road near Maple Avenue and alerted the authorities. Maurer's body was found behind a guardrail. She had been raped and strangled. The rapist's DNA was able to be isolated. Using public genealogy sites, it was revealed that it matched with one of Lindahl's relatives. In 2019, his body was exhumed and his DNA was obtained. In January 2020, he was officially tied via that DNA evidence to the Maurer murder.[10]
  • On April 24, 1979, the body of 19-year-old Kathy Halle was discovered in the Fox River near North Aurora after she had been missing for almost a month. In October 2024, police used new DNA techniques to link Lindahl to the murder and concluded that he was responsible for the death of Halle.[11][12]
  • While inspecting his apartment, several photographs of young girls were located by authorities, including one that is believed to be that of 16-year-old Deborah McCall. Deborah was last seen in Downers Grove, Illinois on November 5, 1979. She left Downers Grove North High School that day and has never been heard from again. Investigators believe that Lindahl was involved in her disappearance.[13][14]
  • On June 23, 1980, Lindahl abducted 25-year-old Debra Colliander from the parking lot of a shopping center in Aurora, Illinois. He took her to his apartment, where he raped Colliander before she escaped after he fell asleep. She notified police, and this time, he was arrested and charged. However, Lindahl paid his bail and was released. On October 7, Debra Colliander went missing after leaving work, and the trial, which was supposed to take place in 1981, was canceled, due to the absence of the key witness. Subsequently, all charges were dropped.[15] In 1982, the decomposing body of Colliander was located in an Oswego cornfield. Soon after, a man contacted the Aurora police, claiming that Lindahl had offered him a monetary reward in exchange for killing Colliander to prevent her from testifying at trial, which led investigators to place Lindahl as the prime suspect, as he had a clear motive to commit the murder.[8]
  • On April 4, 1981, while cruising around in one of the shopping and entertainment districts of Naperville, Lindahl met 18-year-old Charles Robert “Chuck” Huber Jr.. After playing some ten-pin bowling together, Lindahl suggested that they to go to Lindahl's ex-girlfriend's apartment, to which Huber agreed. That same evening, when they arrived in the apartment, Lindahl attacked Huber with a knife, fatally stabbing him a total of 28 times. During the attack, however, Huber resisted, causing Lindahl to accidentally stab himself in the thigh, severing his own femoral artery. This resulted in heavy bleeding, from which Lindahl, aged 28, died, over his deceased victim.[16]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "West suburban man linked to teen's 1976 murder is a suspect in 12 murders, nine rapes, investigator says". Chicago Tribune. January 17, 2020.
  2. ^ "Man Linked to 1976 Murder Now a Suspect in 12 Killings, 9 Rapes". January 17, 2020.
  3. ^ "How DuPage police solved the 44-year-old murder of Pamela Maurer. 1/14/2020". January 13, 2020.
  4. ^ "Did misogyny, inept police work and more let a suburban killer evade justice?". June 16, 2023.
  5. ^ "Retired Aurora police officer explains his friendship with the man suspected in 12 murders, 9 rapes: 'He was a piece of filth with a short fuse'". Chicago Tribune. January 17, 2020.
  6. ^ a b Babwin, Don (January 14, 2020). "Was killer in 1976 slaying of suburban teen a serial killer?". AP News. Retrieved October 24, 2024.
  7. ^ "Victim of suspected suburban killer Bruce Lindahl describes, decades later, her harrowing escape: 'He said no one would believe me'". Chicago Tribune. January 23, 2020.
  8. ^ a b c "Years of violence: A timeline of Bruce Lindahl in the west suburbs". Chicago Tribune. January 23, 2020.
  9. ^ "1976 MURDER CASE IS REOPENED. December 9, 1993". Chicago Tribune. December 9, 1993.
  10. ^ "Police use DNA to solve a 1976 murder — and now the public can help crack more cold cases. Jan 14, 2020". January 14, 2020.
  11. ^ Sabrina Franza and Charlie De Mar (October 22, 2024). "Suspected serial killer Bruce Lindahl linked to 1979 cold case out of North Aurora, Illinois". CBS News. Archived from the original on October 23, 2024.
  12. ^ Campinoti, MariaSole (October 23, 2024). "A 19-year-old disappeared from her Illinois village in 1979. Almost half a century later, the cold case has been solved". CNN. Retrieved October 30, 2024.
  13. ^ "Deborah A. McCall. Deborah, circa 1979; Age-progression to age 54 (circa 2017). Missing Since 11/05/1979. Missing From Downers Grove, Illinois. Classification Endangered Missing".
  14. ^ "Cold Case: Police suspect serial killer strangled Illinois teen in 1976. Jan 14, 2020". Archived from the original on January 15, 2020. Retrieved February 7, 2020.
  15. ^ "Police Link Illinois Killer To Death Of Waukesha County Woman". January 14, 2020.
  16. ^ "Naperville police chief recalls finding killer's body atop stabbing victim's. 1/13/2020". January 13, 2020.