San Francisco Chronicle

Cold case:

In search for clues to slayings, long-dead Richmond-area killer IDd

- By Jill Tucker Jill Tucker is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: jtucker@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @jilltucker

For years, police in California and New Hampshire knew Robert “Bob” Evans was a killer, murdering and dismemberi­ng his wife in a home outside Richmond decades after presumably killing an unidentifi­ed woman and three young children in New Hampshire.

They just never knew his real name.

He was actually Terrance Peder Rasmussen, New Hampshire authoritie­s announced Friday.

Law enforcemen­t officials believe the discovery of Rasmussen’s identity is a breakthrou­gh in the decades-old murder mystery of the four victims in Allenstown, N.H.

Using DNA with living relatives and comparing fingerprin­ts connected with aliases, police pieced together the identity of the man as well as much of his whereabout­s from his birth in 1943 to his death in 2010 in a California prison. But they are hoping that the public release of Rasmussen’s name will help fill in holes from his timeline, including substantia­l time spent in the Bay Area in the 1970s, to help identify the nameless woman and children.

Rasmussen used several aliases, in addition to Evans, including Curtis Kimball, Jerry Gorman, Gerald Mockerman, Gordon Jenson and Lawrence William Vanner while living in California during the 1980s. He died in 2010 while serving a life sentence for his wife’s murder. He was listed by the California state correction­s department as Kimball.

Police believe Rasmussen killed the woman and three girls in New Hampshire, one of whom was his biological daughter, stuffing them in metal drums on a rural property. Police found the first barrel with two victims in 1985 and the second with the other two in 2000. It’s unclear when they were killed.

New Hampshire authoritie­s also believe Rasmussen is responsibl­e for the death of another woman, Denise Beaudin, 32, who disappeare­d after leaving with him for what police believe was a cross-country trip.

Rasmussen was convicted of only one murder, however, that of his wife, Eunsoon Jun. Contra Costa County police in 2002 found her partially dismembere­d body under a pile of cat litter. In 2003, he pleaded guilty to her murder.

Jun was his second wife. His first wife, along with their children, are alive, police said.

According to the New Hampshire Attorney General’s office, Rasmussen served in the U.S. Navy in California from 1962 to 1967 and lived in Santa Cruz, Contra Costa and San Mateo counties from the early 1970s until his arrest in 2002.

He was employed as an electricia­n and handyman while in California.

In a timeline provided by the authoritie­s, Rasmussen moved to Redwood City in 1970 and worked as an electricia­n in Palo Alto.

In 1974, he visited his first wife and children in Arizona, accompanie­d by an unidentifi­ed woman. Investigat­ors are particular­ly interested in whom he was traveling with at that time.

By 1986, Rasmussen was living in Santa Cruz County, working in a Scotts Valley RV park under the name Gordon Jenson, and after several years of unknown whereabout­s, he was again in California, living as Vanner.

Police ask anyone with any informatio­n about Rasmussen to contact New Hampshire State Police-Cold Case Unit at (603) 223-3856 or coldcaseun­it@ dos.nh.gov.

 ??  ?? Terrance Peder Rasmussen killed a woman and three girls in New Hampshire, police there believe.
Terrance Peder Rasmussen killed a woman and three girls in New Hampshire, police there believe.

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