Golden State Killer suspect must provide new DNA samples
Joseph James Deangelo, the suspected East Area Rapist, is arraigned in a Sacramento courtroom on April 27.
Sacramento County investigators announced Deangelo’s arrest last week and said that not only did his DNA match evidence found at some of the killings, but his known whereabouts also coincided with the timeline of the killings.
Prosecutors argued that obtaining additional DNA, fingerprints and photographs were just a continuation of a search warrant a judge signed April
24, and that by providing them Deangelo would not be incriminating himself – which he could lawfully refuse to do under the Constitution.
“In the present case, obtaining the defendant’s major case prints and his DNA sample does not require him to speak or say even a word,” prosecutors wrote. “Likewise, taking photographs of his person does not require the defendant to share his thoughts and beliefs with law enforcement.”
Public defenders had argued that now that Deangelo is charged with murder, police must go through the court and follow discovery rules to collect such evidence.
Judge Michael Sweet however ruled that what investigators seek, though more extensive, is akin to the fingerprints and swabs collected from anyone booked on a serious felony charge. The collection of such evidence was approved before Deangelo’s arrest in a search warrant signed by a magistrate.
That search warrant is among documents that remain sealed in the case. The Los Angeles Times and other news organizations have filed a motion to have the search warrant unsealed.
Sweet will consider that motion May 14, the next time D’angelo is due to appear in court.
Thus far, authorities have been tight-lipped on what evidence they have that connects Deangelo to the killings other than his DNA.
Over the years, the Golden State Killer was variously known in different parts of the state as the Original Night Stalker, the East Area Rapist and the Visalia Ransacker.
His known crimes started with violent burglaries in Visalia that graduated to rapes around Sacramento County and then rapes and killings by the time he popped up on the radar of Southern California law enforcement at the end of 1979.
Not until DNA technology advanced two decades later did authorities conclude that all the crimes were committed by the same person.
And it wasn’t until an investigator took a novel – and to some controversial – approach in submitting the killer’s DNA to a public genealogy database that investigators knew where to start looking.
The familial trail led to Deangelo, officials say. Detectives then gathered two separate DNA samples from Deangelo that they said matched evidence collected at crime scenes and took him into custody.