Lodi News-Sentinel

California prisoner admits to killing I-5 strangler

Accused inmate says it was a ‘mission for avenging’ victims

- Nate Gartrell

IONE — Jason Budrow, the California prisoner accused of strangling to death the serial killer known as the “I-5 Strangler” in the prison cell they shared, confessed in a five-page letter to the Bay Area News Group, writing that he spent months “grooming” his intended victim for murder.

Budrow strangled 81-year-old Roger Kibbe to death “with a triangle choke hold” the same day they became cellmates at Mule

Creek State Prison, he wrote. The late February homicide had two motives, according to Budrow: He originally wanted to be placed in a single-man cell, but as he learned more about

Kibbe’s case, it became “a mission for avenging”

Kibbe’s victims.

“My actions were drafted out with specific intent, cognitive complexity, and were generally more nefar- ious than a haphazard murder-spat,” Budrow wrote. He later added, “What had started out as my original bare-bones plan of doing a straightfo­rward homicide of a cellmate to obtain my singlecell status evolved into a mission for avenging that youngest girl and all of Roger Kibbe’s other victims.”

The letter was titled “Ascension ... may their souls go to heaven ...”

Budrow — who is serving life without parole for a Southern California woman’s murder — wrote that he wasn’t concerned about legal consequenc­es. Thus far, no criminal charges have been filed in Kibbe’s death, court records show.

“Should Amador County and/or the new Attorney General for the State of California elect to seek death penalty prosecutio­n against me for murder-one with special circumstan­ces (lying in wait, execution style,

desecratin­g a corpse, whatever) they can go ahead and ‘run that,’” Budrow wrote. “I am down to test my theory that no jury during a penalty phase of my potential death penalty trial will ever vote to see me executed for murdering Roger Kibbe, the ‘I-5 Stranger.’”

He added that he wanted to apologize to “doctors, professors and instructor­s” he’d been working with for the past eight years in various prison educationa­l programs, writing that he “lied to, and deceived, people who considered themselves my friends and advocates.” He added, “I did not do this to get attention, nor do I believe that I should be compliment­ed.”

Kibbe was serving multiple life sentences without the possibilit­y of parole and is believed to have raped and killed at least seven women and girls. His modus operandi was to offer a potential victim a ride and murder them in a secluded area. He was known to cut pieces of his victims’ hair or clothing as a trophy. Originally convicted of murdering a 17-year-old girl, in 2009, he confessed to six additional murders from 1977-86 in a plea deal to avoid the death penalty. Prison officials discovered Kibbe’s body Feb. 28, though Budrow says he killed his cellmate the night before. Budrow was placed in administra­tive segregatio­n after the discovery, according to a news release by the California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion.

This is not the first public confession for the 40-year-old Budrow, who in 2010 told a Riverside Press-Enterprise reporter he fatally strangled 48-year-old Margret Dalton in the Riverside County area known as Good Hope (he was eventually convicted and sentenced to life). In a jailhouse interview, Budrow reportedly explained that his victim “had to die” because she was a police informant.

When asked about the “666” tattooed above his right eye, he replied that he was a “Satanist,” and lifted his orange jumpsuit to show a scar he said was the result of ritual bloodletti­ng, the newspaper reported. At the time of that murder,

Budrow was a registered sex offender for a 2006 conviction of entering the home of a 14-yearold neighbor and sexually assaulting her two years earlier. In that case, he told police he was intoxicate­d and he believed the girl was 17, and that he confessed because “could not live with himself, or run from the truth,” according to the PressEnter­prise.

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