Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Did an innocent man die in prison for a murder committed by the Golden State Killer?

- The Sacramento Bee (TNS)

SACRAMENTO – The day after Christmas in 1975, Donna Jo Richmond, 14, was expected home before dark.

She had left her house in Exeter – the Central Valley town between Fresno and Bakersfiel­d – earlier that afternoon, wearing new clothes she’d received as holiday gifts and riding her bike to feed some farm animals and visit friends.

But as the sun sank and the valley fog thickened, she had not returned and her mother grew concerned.

Richmond’s family went looking for her, but all they found was more worry and her bicycle, damaged and abandoned, in a neighbor’s orange grove. Underneath it was a handyman’s invoice book with a name inside that pointed to a suspect: Oscar Archie Clifton.

Police knew Clifton, then 35, a carpenter and painter, with a decadeold conviction for assault and attempted rape, who lived nearby. Just after midnight, they arrested him for kidnapping. Hours later, a farm worker found Richmond dead in another grove a few miles away. She had been strangled and stabbed and was naked from the waist down.

The charges against Clifton were upped to murder, and a year later, he was convicted of abducting, attempting to rape and killing Richmond. He died in prison in 2013 while serving a life sentence, but maintained his innocence during his decades of incarcerat­ion.

Recently, Joseph Deangelo Jr., was arrested at this home in Citrus Heights on suspicion of being the East Area Rapist (aka the Golden State Killer), thought to be responsibl­e for more than 50 rapes and a dozen murders throughout California. Authoritie­s also believe he is responsibl­e for a series of burglaries and Peeping Tom incidents in Tulare County, credited to the Visalia Ransacker.

Deangelo worked in Exeter, near Visalia, as a police officer at the time Richmond was murdered. Now, as authoritie­s examine cases that could be connected with Deangelo, Clifton’s quick arrest, problems with the evidence used against him and a yearslong effort by a private investigat­or have raised a troubling question: Did Clifton serve life in prison for a crime committed by the Golden State Killer?

“He was innocent,” said Tony Reid, a Los Angeles lawyer and detective who has extensivel­y examined the case and documented his findings on the podcast 12-26-75. “Wrongful conviction­s are ... difficult to decipher because there are half-truths and lies. (But) the truth speaks for itself. The evidence speaks for itself.”

Richmond’s body was found close to the site of another vicious crime that local police were struggling to solve at the time.

In November 1974, about a year before Richmond was killed and a year-anda-half after Deangelo began working in the area, Jennifer Armour, 15, was found dead, drowned in a canal with her bra knotted Joseph James Deangelo, the suspected Golden State Killer, is arraigned in a Sacramento court on April 27.

around one wrist as if her hands had been bound with it.

Unlike Richmond, whose family was establishe­d in the area (her father worked in the county assessor’s office), Armour was new in town. Her parents were recently divorced, said her brother Rob Armour, and the family was “falling apart.”

Armour’s dad was a Coast Guard officer and her mother had stayed home. Now, their mom was struggling to support three kids. Jenny started “ditching school” and running with a tough crowd of boys who lived nearby, Armour said.

The night she vanished, she was walking to the Visalia Kmart to meet friends and go to the Cowhide Football Game, an annual rivalry match between the two local high schools. Like Richmond, she never made it home.

Armour was found more than a week later in the Friant-kern Canal, two miles north of where Richmond’s body would be discovered

along the same man-made waterway.

Rob Armour, then 13, remembers officers coming to his door with a leather necklace he had made for his sixth-grade girlfriend, then given to Jenny when the girl broke up with him. Police asked him to identify it.

“It was like on TV,” he said. “You just know why they are there before they say anything.”

He and his brother were taken to the station and questioned, then left to walk home alone, he remembers.

Police initially looked at the young men Jenny hung out with as suspects, Armour said. But no arrests were ever made, and over the decades, the case was largely forgotten. Armour and his family didn’t talk about it, he said.

But last November, cold case detectives with the Tulare County Sheriff’s Office unexpected­ly put out a public call for informatio­n attempting to link Clifton to the Armour killing.

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