Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Persistenc­e … and DNA

- THE SACRAMENTO BEE

In an era when true crime tales of serial killers are the stuff of Netflix binges, it may be difficult to appreciate the fear spread in California’s capital by the East Area Rapist in 1976.

The Golden State’s dark side was, of course, well known by then—the Zodiac Killer, Charles Manson—but in Sacramento, 1976 was a “time of innocence” when kids played outside until dark and many residents didn’t lock their doors, recalled Sacramento County District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert. Schubert was 12 that year, and living in the area. Once the assaults started, she said, “it all changed.”

Wednesday, thanks to an investigat­ion that was agonizingl­y slow for decades and then lightning fast, Schubert and a sobering array of California law enforcemen­t officials announced an arrest in the terrifying crime spree that encompasse­d at least 12 slayings and 45 rapes. The case is still unfolding, but there are already important takeaways:

The persistenc­e of law enforcemen­t to seek justice for victims: After an event in June 2016 to mark 40 years since the first crime, Schubert and Sheriff Scott Jones put more resources and renewed their commitment to solve the case.

The difference that public attention can make: Hundreds of tips poured in after 2016, and focus on the suspect— who also became known as the Golden State Killer as he moved to the Bay area and Southern California—intensifie­d with a new book.

And the value of DNA testing and evidence: While officials were sparing with the details, they said that new technology allowed DNA samples from several old crime scenes to be used and eventually matched last week with a sample obtained by detectives from material discarded by Joseph James DeAngelo.

DeAngelo, 72, a former cop who lived for more than three decades in Citrus Heights, was arrested without incident on Tuesday. Wednesday, officials said he has been charged with murder in the February 1978 killings of Brian and Katie Maggiore in Rancho Cordova and the March 1980 killings of Charlene and Lyman Smith in Ventura County.

For now, we can hope the arrest eases the anguish for the victims and their loved ones—hundreds now across several generation­s, as we were reminded by Bruce Harrington, whose brother and sister-in-law were slain in 1980 in Dana Point. “It’s time for all victims to grieve,” he said.

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