South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Killer about to go free after serving 7 years

Letter informs families that Gary Troutman is set to be released early

- By Susannah Bryan South Florida Sun Sentinel

Angela Savage will be forever 24. Gary Troutman, a two-time killer who knew Angela from the neighborho­od, made sure of that.

The devoted mother of two had so many more breaths to take, so many more songs to sing and miles to walk and dreams to dream. But Troutman snuffed out her life and that of her unborn child 36 years ago, cursing her loved ones with a deep down heartache that lasts to this day.

Troutman was 24 when he raped and strangled Angela in March of 1986, dumping her lifeless body on a dirt path just blocks from her Deerfield Beach home.

Justice did not come quickly. Troutman, now 61, wasn’t arrested for the grisly crime until 2007, when DNA evidence linked him to the murder.

He was finally sent away to prison in 2015 after taking a plea deal. His sentence: 30 years. Seven years later, he’s about to go free.

Angela’s family is reeling from the news.

The warning came in the mail, courtesy of the Florida Department of Correction­s, in a letter addressed to the Deerfield Beach home of Angela’s parents. Troutman will be released from his prison cell at Everglades Correction­al Institutio­n in Miami within 90 days, the letter says. And now Angela’s family wants to send out its own warning.

Wayne Adams, Angela’s brother, contacted the South Florida Sun Sentinel to sound the alarm.

“People need to know a coldbloode­d killer is going to be released back into the community,” he said. “He might be out around Christmas time. I think he was born evil, I really do. He’s going to kill someone again. That old Satan is going to rise out of him again.”

Just six weeks before killing Angela, Troutman killed teenager Cassandra Scott. A decade went by before he was convicted of that

crime in 1996. He received a 25-year sentence but served only nine years because he committed the crime before 1995, the year the state began requiring prisoners to serve at least 85% of their sentences. By 2005, he was released from prison, free again.

Justice served?

A second judgment day for Troutman came in July 2015, when he was finally sentenced for killing Angela Savage.

Troutman only has to serve 15 years — a mere half of his prison sentence — because, once again, he committed the crime prior to 1995.

Troutman has been in prison seven years and spent eight years in jail awaiting trial.

“They never broke it down for us and told us he’d be getting out in seven years,” Wayne Adams said of the now-retired prosecutor­s who handled the case.

The Broward State Attorney’s Office declined to comment.

With the plea deal, the first-degree murder charge was downgraded to second-degree murder. The kidnapping and rape charges were dropped.

Brian Cavanaugh, a retired prosecutor who worked on the Troutman case, said he couldn’t recall details on why those charges were dropped.

“We were thinking he’d be incarcerat­ed for at least six, seven more years,” said Bernard Adams, Angela’s father. “To get this letter saying he’s going to be released within 90 days, we were shocked and disappoint­ed.”

At the time of her murder, Angela had a 5-year-old daughter in kindergart­en, a 6-month-old son and a new baby on the way, with big plans to marry the man who fathered her son and unborn child. But all her dreams ended with Troutman’s evil deed.

It seems unfair to let a two-time killer go free, but that’s how the American justice system works, said Bob Jarvis, a law professor at Nova Southeaste­rn University.

“Once you serve your sentence, you’re allowed to go back out in the general population,” he said. “You’re right: A murderer goes free. In our society, once you’ve paid your debt, you’re allowed to go free.”

Case gone cold

Angela and her baby son went missing sometime after noon on March 17, 1986. She’d left her Deerfield Beach apartment to buy a pack of cigarettes, but never returned home.

The next day, Angela’s badly beaten body was found before dawn, lying on a dirt path just a few blocks from her home. She had been raped, bound and gagged. Police estimate she’d been killed between 3 a.m. and 4 a.m.

Around 30 minutes after Angela’s body was found, a neighbor heard a baby crying on her doorstep. It was Angela’s son.

The murder put the community on edge. But with no leads, the case grew cold.

Then in 1994, Troutman confessed to strangling teenager Cassandra Scott in February 1986.

Angela’s family asked police to look into whether he killed Angela, too.

Detectives reopened the case, renting a billboard on Dixie Highway that asked: “Who Murdered Angela Savage?” For their efforts, they got five tips that led nowhere.

Twelve years later, in 2006, the family turned to the Sun Sentinel. A reporter started asking questions and requested any and all files on the 20-year-old murder. Within days, the Broward Sheriff ’s Office reopened the case.

By 2007, detectives had what they needed: DNA evidence that linked Troutman to the crime. He was arrested and charged with first-degree murder, kidnapping and rape.

Haunting details

The gold sandals Angela was wearing on the day she was murdered were missing. They turned up on the day of her funeral, hidden away in a brown paper bag left by the couch.

Her mother made the eerie discovery after the crowd of family and friends who’d come over to comfort Angela’s parents had gone home.

The family suspects it was Troutman who left the sandals behind, sneaking in with the crowd. They also think he’s the one who started calling the house asking for her, only to cackle at the stunned silence on the other end of the line.

Wayne Adams, Angela’s brother, recalls all the haunting details like it was yesterday.

“She went missing that Monday,” he said. “We found her Tuesday. We had the funeral that Saturday. It was a cold week. It was 41 degrees that morning when Troutman put the baby on the doorstep.”

Angela’s sister, Marva, saw her walking to the store that day and stopped to chat, never realizing it would be their last conversati­on.

About five minutes after Angela left the store with her pack of cigarettes, her brother, Ronald Savage, walked in.

“You just missed your sister,” the guy behind the counter told him.

Her brother ran outside to look for her. But she was nowhere to be found.

The family suspects Troutman had already grabbed her.

The next morning, a neighbor heard a baby crying and a car door slamming out front.

“If she had looked out the window, she would have seen Troutman,” Wayne Adams said. “She called the police. She didn’t know who the baby was. The police brought the baby to my mom.”

The day Angela went missing, her brother Wayne stopped by her house. He found her boyfriend, Dween

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