Edmonton Journal

EX-POLICE OFFICER SUSPECTED OF BEING THE GOLDEN STATE KILLER.

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SACRAMENTO, CALIF. • A former police officer who authoritie­s suspect was an elusive serial killer who committed at least 12 homicides, 45 rapes and dozens of burglaries across California in the 1970s and 1980s was arrested Wednesday.

A DNA match in the past six days ties the former police officer to some of the murders, police officials announced Wednesday.

Joseph James DeAngelo, 72, who was fired from the Auburn Police Department, was arrested after a DNA sample came back as a match to the Golden State Killer, Sacramento County District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert said.

Officials said DeAngelo had been arrested on suspicion of committing four killings in Sacramento and Ventura counties and charged with two counts of murder in the Ventura case.

“We knew we were looking for a needle in a haystack, but we also knew that needle was there,” Schubert said. “We found the needle in the haystack and it was right here in Sacramento.”

“The answer was always going to be in the DNA,” she said.

Armed with a gun, the masked attacker terrorized communitie­s by breaking into homes while single women or couples were sleeping. He sometimes tied up the man and piled dishes on his back, then raped the woman while threatenin­g to kill them both if the dishes tumbled.

He often took souvenirs, notably coins and jewelry, from his victims, who ranged in age from 13 to 41.

DeAngelo was fired from the Auburn Police Department in 1979 after he was arrested for stealing a can of dog repellent and a hammer from a drugstore, according to Auburn Journal articles from the time.

The FBI says it had a team gathering evidence at a Sacramento-area home linked to DeAngelo.

Jane Carson-Sandler, who was sexually assaulted in California in 1976 by a man believed to be the so-called “East Area Rapist,” said she received an email Wednesday from a retired detective telling her they have identified the rapist and he’s in custody.

“I have just been overjoyed, ecstatic. It’s an emotional roller-coaster right now,” Carson-Sandler, who now lives near Hilton Head, South Carolina, said. “I feel like I’m in the middle of a dream and I’m going to wake up and it’s not going to be true.”

FBI and California officials in 2016 renewed their search for the East Area Rapist and announced a $50,000 reward. He has been linked to a total of more than 175 crimes between 1976 and 1986.

As he committed crimes across the state, authoritie­s called him by different names. He was dubbed the East Area Rapist after his start in Northern California, the Original Night Stalker after a series of Southern California slayings, and the Diamond Knot Killer for using an elaborate binding method on two of his victims.

He was most recently called the Golden State Killer.

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