57. Terry A. BLAIR
Classification: Serial killer
Characteristics: Rape
Number of victims: 7 - 9
Date of murders: 1982 / June-September 2004
Date of arrest: September 10, 2004
Date of birth: September 16, 1961
Victims profile: His pregnant ex-girlfriend, Angela Monroe / Sheliah McKinzie, 38; Anna Ewing, 42; Patricia Wilson Butler, 45; Darci I. Williams, 25; Carmen Hunt, 40; and Claudette Juniel, 31
Method of murder: Strangulation
Location: Kansas City, Missouri, USA
Status: Sentenced to 25 years imprisonment in 1982. Paroled in 2003. Sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole in March 2008
Characteristics: Rape
Number of victims: 7 - 9
Date of murders: 1982 / June-September 2004
Date of arrest: September 10, 2004
Date of birth: September 16, 1961
Victims profile: His pregnant ex-girlfriend, Angela Monroe / Sheliah McKinzie, 38; Anna Ewing, 42; Patricia Wilson Butler, 45; Darci I. Williams, 25; Carmen Hunt, 40; and Claudette Juniel, 31
Method of murder: Strangulation
Location: Kansas City, Missouri, USA
Status: Sentenced to 25 years imprisonment in 1982. Paroled in 2003. Sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole in March 2008
Terry Blair (born September 16, 1961) is an American
serial killer, who raped and killed at least seven women in Kansas City,
Missouri.
Family history
Terry Blair was born into a family which would have many
encounters with the criminal justice system. He was the fourth eldest of 10
siblings, born to a mother who had only finished the 9th grade and suffered
from mental illness.
While in jail for a separate incident, brother Walter
Blair Jr met a man who offered to pay him $6,000 to kill Katherine Jo Allen so
she could not testify at his rape trial. Blair confessed to abducting Allen
from her apartment before taking her to a vacant lot and shooting her. He was
convicted of murder and was executed in 1993.
Half brother Clifford Miller was convicted in the 1992
abduction of a woman from a bar. He shot the woman in the arm and drove her to
an abandoned house before raping her repeatedly and beating her until she
passed out. She suffered a gunshot wound, fractured skull, broken jaw and
broken cheek bones. She spent two months in the hospital, recovering. Clifford
Miller was sentenced to two life sentences plus 240 years for charges including
kidnapping and forcible sodomy.
Mother Janice Blair fatally shot Elton E. Gray, but was
sentenced to probation after entering an Alford plea.
Terry Blair had already spent 21 years incarcerated for
murdering Angela Monroe, the pregnant mother of his two children, prior to
being charged with these additional six murders. According to court records he
was angry with her for performing acts of prostitution. Incidentally, Blair was
released from prison for two months committing his second murder after Monroe
before heading back to prison for a parole violation.
Crimes
Below is the list of victims Terry Blair was convicted of
killing:
Angela Monroe
Anna Ewing, 42, died on or before July 14, 2004, due to
strangulation and a broken neck.
Patricia Wilson Butler, 58, died on or before September
2, 2004, due to strangulation
Sheliah McKinzie, 38, died on or before September 2,
2004, due to strangulation and a broken neck
Darci I. Williams, 25, died on or before September 4,
2004, due to strangulation and a broken neck
Carmen Hunt, 40, died on or before September 4, 2004, due
to strangulation
Claudette Juniel, 31, died on or before September 4,
2004, due to strangulation and a broken neck
Blair was also accused in two other murders (Sandra Reed
and Nellia Harris), an assault, and three rapes.
Trial and imprisonment
On October 15, 2004, Terry Blair was charged with eight
counts of first-degree murder, one count of first-degree assault, and three
counts of forcible rape.
Blair avoided the death penalty by agreeing to waive his
right to a jury trial. He was sentenced to 25 years imprisonment for the murder
of his first known victim, Angela Monroe. After being released early (after 21
years) he was convicted of killing six more women. For these additional six
murders he was sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole.
Blair is currently housed in the Potosi Correctional
Center in Mineral Point, Missouri.
Trivia
The case of the seven homicides he was convicted of is
featured in the episode "A Serial Killer Calls" of the TV show The
First 48. The episode follows detectives as they receive information of the
death of the first woman all the way up until his capture.
Wikipedia.org
Terry Blair guilty in deaths of six women
By Joe Lambe - The Kansas City Star
Mar. 27, 2008
A judge today found Terry Blair guilty in the deaths of
six women whose bodies were found in the Prospect Avenue corridor in 2003 and
2004.
Jackson County Circuit Judge John O’Malley found Blair,
46, guilty of first-degree murder in the deaths of Sheliah McKinzie, 38; Anna
Ewing, 42; Patricia Wilson Butler, 45; Darci I. Williams, 25; Carmen Hunt, 40; and
Claudette Juniel, 31.
The only possible sentence is life without parole on each
charge.
The verdicts in the non-jury trial end a case that began
with 911 cell phone calls to police on Sept. 3 and Sept. 4, 2004. The caller
told police he killed two women whose bodies had just been found and four
others.
He told them where to find three of the bodies and had
some details only the killer would know.
The man who called himself Scott said he did it because
they were prostitutes, “scum, a disgrace.”
Police arrested Blair within weeks of the calls after his
DNA matched semen in and on victim Sheliah McKinzie. In more than seven hours
of interrogation, Blair denied knowing McKinzie or having sex with her and
confessed to nothing.
At trial this month, defense lawyers contended his DNA
proved nothing because hairs, saliva or semen from other men were on McKinzie
or other victims.
But in closing arguments last week, assistant prosecutor
Michael Hunt reminded the judge that a former prostitute told police before the
911 calls that Blair said he was killing all the prostitutes one by one.
And the mother of one victim, he said, last saw her alive
when she dropped her daughter off to meet with Blair and two other men. And a
teen witness, Hunt said, testified that Blair told her that whoever was killing
the women probably had a good reason.
Hunt also noted that even a defense expert said the voice
on the 911 calls was that of an African-American man raised in the United
States.
With all the evidence, he said, “the finger points to
Terry Blair.”
Defense lawyer Cynthia Dryden attacked the evidence as
too unreliable and too little to convict. She noted that authorities never
proved Blair made the 911 calls and said prosecutors had to do that.
“If they can’t,” she said, “they cannot convict.”
Before trial, prosecutors made a deal with Blair to drop
charges for two other murders, three rapes and an assault. In exchange for that
and for prosecutors dropping the death penalty, Blair agreed to trial before
O’Malley without a jury.
Blair Found Guilty On All Murder Counts
Judge Criticizes Police For Media Coverage
KMBC.com
March 27, 2008
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- A judge convicted a man Thursday of
killing six women whose bodies were dumped along the Prospect Corridor, an area
frequented by prostitutes and drug dealers.
Terry Blair, 46, was found guilty of six counts of
first-degree murder in the 2004 slayings. But Jackson County Circuit Judge John
R. O'Malley acknowledged the case was full of conflicting expert testimony and
"small pieces of circumstantial evidence."
Blair had agreed to be tried before a judge instead of
jury in return for prosecutors agreeing not to pursue the death penalty. He is
to be sentenced to life in prison at an April 24 hearing.
Prosecutors described Blair as calculating and determined
to kill as many prostitutes as he could. At least one women had been strangled,
but the causes of death of the other women could not be determined because
their bodies had decomposed so badly.
Upon hearing the verdict, Blair lowered his eyes to the
table while family members of his victims hugged and cried in the gallery
behind him. Blair's attorneys left without speaking to reporters.
"I knew from the beginning that it would come out
this way because the truth will always survive over lies and evil," said
Irene Williams, mother of victim Darci Williams. "You could look in his
eyes, and it's a blankness. But when he looks at a woman, it's an evil look.
It's just like hatred."
Williams, who has cancer, said she feels at peace with
the case.
"What time I have now, I know that justice has been
served. Even here on earth he may not get all he deserves, but he will get it
in the hereafter," Williams said.
Relatives of other victims said Williams became known as
a kind of grandma to the families. The relatives grew close during this long
ordeal, which included constant reminders of their loved one's high-risk
lifestyles.
"I'm her daughter. She was somebody's mother. They
weren't prostitutes, drug addicts -- they were somebody's mother. They were
women," said Trish Davis, daughter of victim Patricia Wilson Butler.
Prosecutors showed that Blair's semen was found on the
body of victim Sheliah McKinzie and presented evidence they said showed Blair
may have been the one who called 911 to tell police where to find the bodies of
victims.
Blair has denied involvement in the killings and his
defense attorneys said the evidence against him was weak and circumstantial.
For example, they said the semen found on McKinzie proves Blair had sex with
her, not that he killed her.
But O'Malley said the placement of semen indicated
McKinzie hadn't moved or attempted to clean herself after having sex.
"Since we know this semen belonged to Mr. Blair we
must conclude he was present as Ms. McKinzie expired, her throat crushed by his
hands and by his irrational, evil hatred of women," he said.
In addition to McKinzie, 38, Williams, 25, and Butler,
45, the victims were: Anna Ewing, 42; Carmen Hunt, 40; and Claudette Juniel,
31.
Charges against Blair in two other slayings -- those of
Nellia Harris, 33, and Sandra Reed, 47 -- were dismissed in October. Harris,
unlike the other victims, was killed in 2003.
Blair also had been charged in three rapes and an assault
that involved four victims who survived their attacks. Those charges also were
dropped.
Blair was arrested in September 2004 when he was on
parole for the 1982 murder of his pregnant ex-girlfriend, Angela Monroe, who
was the mother of two of his children. He had served 21 years in prison.
KMBC's Peggy Breit reported that before announcing the
verdict, the judge criticized the Kansas City Police Department for its media
coverage of the case. The Blair investigation was featured on the cable program
"The First 48" on A&E.
The show followed Kansas City detectives as they discovered
the women's bodies. A clip of the 7 1/2-hour interrogation appeared on the
show. Defense attorneys fought to throw out the interrogation, but the judge
decided it did not violate Blair's constitutional rights to a fair trial.
The judge said the police officers should be more
concerned about solving crimes rather than television.
"I respectfully suggest, if you don't want problems,
you need to pursue the criminals instead of the cameras," O'Malley said.
He also said mistakes were caused by the presence of the
cameras, and the sometimes shoddy policework allowed the defense to effectively
dispute evidence.
Closing arguments made in Terry Blair trial
Jenn Strathman - NBCActionNews.com
March 21, 2008
KANSAS CITY, Mo. – The fate of accused serial killer
Terry Blair now lies in the hands of a Jackson County judge.
Closing arguments were held in the trial Friday.
Blair is charged with killing six women who worked as
prostitutes. Their bodies were found along the Prospect Corridor in 2004.
Charges against Blair in two other slayings were
dismissed by Jackson County Circuit Judge John R. O'Malley in October.
Blair agreed to a non-jury trial in exchange for
prosecutors not seeking the death penalty. Prosecutors also earlier agreed to
dismiss charges against Blair in the two other killings, three rapes and an
assault.
The prosecution alleged Blair killed the six women
because he thought all prostitutes were scum, showing pictures of the six women
killed and describing how each one was killed.
Earlier in the trial, a former prostitute testified that
Blair once told her he wanted to "kill all prostitutes."
Jackson County Prosecutor Michael Hunt said Blair's DNA
was found on the women and is the link to the killer.
But the defense argued that hairs and DNA also left links
to others. "Some of this DNA is not [Blair's]," defense attorney
Cynthia Dryden said. "When you start pulling out part and considering only
some…you can make it fit whatever you want."
The defense also questioned the Kansas City Police Department's
investigation, specifically how they pinpointed where 911 calls were made.
Those calls played a large role in the case.
The prosecution said Blair made the calls that described
in detail where the bodies of the women were hidden.
A voice analysis expert testified for the defense that
the voice on the calls did not match Blair's voice patterns.
The defense said the prosecution did not prove beyond a
reasonable doubt that Blair committed the murders.
Expert: Anonymous caller likely not Blair
NBCActionNews.com
March 13, 2008
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - The clipped, matter-of-fact voice
on two 911 calls telling police where to find the bodies of five women the
caller claimed to have killed is not likely the voice of the man charged in the
deaths, a linguistics expert testified Thursday.
Thomas Purnell, an assistant professor of linguistics at
the University of Wisconsin-Madison, testified for the defense in the fourth
day of the trial for accused serial killer Terry Blair.
Blair faces first-degree murder charges in the deaths of
six women whose bodies were found after an anonymous 911 caller told police in
September 2004 about the bodies and where the caller said he had put them.
"It's unlikely that the two speakers, the 911 call
speaker and Mr. Blair, are the same person," Purnell said.
In his testimony, Purnell described the complex analysis
he performed on the 911 calls and telephone conversations between Blair and his
grandmother and Blair and a television reporter that were made while Blair was
in jail awaiting trial.
Purnell said Blair and the caller shared some voice
characteristics, such as being male, African-American and urban. But he said
among other things, their pitch and pacing were different.
Blair, 46, is charged with six counts of first-degree
murder in the 2004 deaths of six Kansas City women: Ewing and McKinzie;
Patricia Wilson Butler, 45; Darci I. Williams, 25; Carmen Hunt, 40; and
Claudette Juniel, 31.
Charges against Blair in two other slayings - those of
Nellia Harris, 33, and Sandra Reed, 47 - were dismissed in October. Harris,
unlike the other victims, was killed in 2003.
Blair agreed to a nonjury trial before Jackson County
Judge Circuit John R. O'Malley in exchange for prosecutors not seeking the
death penalty. Prosecutors also earlier agreed to dismiss charges against Blair
in two other killings, three rapes and an assault.
Blair has denied involvement in the killings.
In the 911 calls, which were played by the defense in the
courtroom Thursday, the caller, who seems to have a slight accent, tells the
dispatcher immediately in the first call that he wants to report a dead body.
He tells precisely where the body can be found, down to the color of the house.
"How do you know a dead body is there?" the
dispatcher asks.
"I put it there," the caller responds.
When asked to give his name, the caller, says, "Oh,
no," and then repeats where the body is.
"Look up under the branches under the bushes by the
alley," he says. "It's an abandoned house. It's red." He says
the body has been there for two months.
When asked if he knows the victim's name, he says he
doesn't.
"She's a prostitute."
So were the other two, he says.
"You killed them also?"
"Yeah."
The dispatcher asks how he killed them. "You
strangled her?"
The caller hangs up.
On the second call, which came in the next day, the
caller says he wants to report two more bodies of prostitutes. He calls them
"scum."
"It's a disgrace," he says. He says one of the
bodies has been there a week and is starting to stink. He refuses to give his
name, but says he can be referred to as "Scott," and that he will
call the next day. He says there are six more bodies to be found.
On cross-examination, Assistant Prosecutor Michael Hunt
asked Purnell if the caller could have been disguising his voice because
"he's talking to police and telling them about six people he's
killed."
"When he's talking to his grandma, the consequences
are a whole lot different than when he's talking to the police about six
murders he committed," Hunt said.
Purnell said the caller could have been disguising his
voice, and acknowledged that he had never performed such an analysis before for
court proceedings. He had only done them in the classroom.
Terry Blair avoids death penalty by agreeing to trial
without jury
By Joe Lambe, The Kansas City Star
February 2, 2008
Jackson County prosecutors agreed today to no longer seek
the death penalty against a man charged with murdering six women whose bodies
were found along the Prospect Corridor.
As part of the deal, prosecutors also permanently
dismissed charges for two other murders, three rapes and an assault.
In exchange, Terry A. Blair, 46, agreed to a non-jury
trial before a judge.
At a hearing this morning, Jackson County judge John
O’Malley approved the agreement, which is similar to that given last year to
serial killer Lorenzo Gilyard.
Gilyard, also tried before O’Malley, was convicted last
year of strangling six women in 1986 and 1987 and sentenced to life without
parole.
Based on DNA evidence, Gilyard was originally charged
with murdering 13 women but prosecutors elected to try only seven cases.
O’Malley found there was not enough evidence in one of those to convict.
Blair’s trial is scheduled to start March 10 on the six
murders. All those cases were connected by 911 calls to police that helped them
locate the bodies in the corridor between July and September of 2004.
Suspect in slayings agrees to non-jury trial to avoid
death
The Kansas City Star
February 1, 2008
Associated Press
Jackson County prosecutors again are making a deal with a
suspected serial killer.
This time, the suspect is Terry Blair, who is being
allowed to avoid the death penalty in exchange for him agreeing to be tried by
a judge instead of a jury, The Kansas City Star reported on its Web site
Friday.
Blair, 46, is charged with the 2004 slayings of six
women, whose bodies were dumped in Kansas City neighborhoods frequented by drug
addicts and prostitutes. His trial is scheduled to start March 10.
Jackson County Circuit Judge John O'Malley approved the
agreement between Blair and prosecutors at a hearing. The agreement is similar
to one allowed last year for Lorenzo Gilyard, who went on to be sentenced to
life without parole for strangling six women in 1986 and 1987.
A spokesman for the Jackson County prosecutor's office
did not immediately return an e-mail or phone message from The Associated Press
on Friday.
Blair's attorneys had asked the judge to dismiss the
murder charges or forbid the death penalty in the case, saying investigators'
handling of the evidence had kept the defense from being able to do its job.
For example, they said videotape footage showing someone
dumping one of the bodies sat for three years at FBI headquarters in
Washington, D.C., before they were able to look at it.
O'Malley denied the attorneys' requests at a hearing in
September but scolded investigators.
The six slayings that Blair is accused of committing were
connected by 911 calls to police that helped them locate the bodies in 2004.
Blair is charged with the deaths of Sheliah McKinzie, 38;
Patricia Wilson Butler, 45; Darci I. Williams, 25; Anna Ewing, 42; Carmen Hunt,
40; and Claudette Juniel, 31. The women were all strangled.
Charges against Blair in two other slayings — those of
victims Nellia Harris, 33, and Sandra Reed, 47 — were dismissed by O'Malley in
October. Harris, unlike the other victims, was killed in 2003.
Blair was charged in McKinzie's death in September 2004
after semen left on the victim's body led investigators to link him to the
crime. Three months later, charges were added in the other women's deaths.
At the time of his arrest, Blair was on parole after
serving 21 years for the 1982 murder of Angela Monroe, his pregnant
ex-girlfriend and the mother of two of his children.
Prosecutors seek death for accused Kansas City serial
killer
May 24, 2005
An accused serial killer charged with eight women's
deaths will face the death penalty if convicted, it was announced Tuesday.
Jackson County Prosecutor Michael Sanders filed papers
outlining aggravating circumstances in each woman's killing that qualify Terry
Blair for capital punishment.
"This decision not just represents the desire of the
prosecutor's office but also the desire of the family members standing here
today," Sanders said.
Blair, 43, has been charged in the deaths of eight women
whose bodies were found last year in Kansas City neighborhoods frequented by
drug addicts and prostitutes.
Sanders said two factors qualify Blair for the death
penalty. First, his prior record of murder; he spent 21 years behind bars for
killing his pregnant ex-girlfriend. And second, the alleged killings were
"outrageously or wantonly vile, horrible or inhuman."
Blair is charged with killing Sheliah McKinzie, 38;
Patricia Wilson Butler, 45; Darci I. Williams, 25; Anna Ewing, 42; Carmen Hunt,
40; Claudette Juniel, 31; Nellia Harris, 33; and Sandra Reed, 47.
Blair is also accused of raping three other women.
He comes from a family with a long record of violent
crime.
Blair's mother killed a man but received probation. One
of his brothers was executed for another killing and a half brother was
sentenced to life in prison for kidnapping and other charges.
Some family members of victims wiped away tears as they
stood at Sanders' side for the announcement.
The prosecutor said there was no dissent among the
families of victims.
"Ever since our loved ones were found murdered,
that's all we've wanted," said Trish Davis, a daughter of Patricia Wilson
Butler. "We've wanted justice."
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