The Guardian (USA)

US ‘Torso Killer’, convicted of 11 homicides, admits to five more killings

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A serial killer known as the “Torso Killer” already convicted of 11 homicides admitted on Monday that he also killed five women on Long Island in the late 60s and early 70s.

Richard Cottingham was sentenced on Monday to 25 years to life for the killing of 23-year-old Diane Cusick, who was killed in February 1968 after buying shoes at the Green Acres Mall in Nassau county.

As part of a plea deal, Cottingham received immunity from prosecutio­n for the four other killings. The 76-yearold prisoner attended the hearing via a video feed from a New Jersey prison.

“Today is one of the most emotional days we’ve ever had in the Nassau county district attorney’s office,” the district attorney, Anne Donnelly, said at a news conference where she was joined by several family members of Cottingham’s victims. “In the case of Diane Cusick, her family has waited nearly 55 years for someone to be held accountabl­e for her death.”

Donnelly said Cottingham, believed to be one of the United States’ most prolific serial killers, “has caused irreparabl­e harm to so many people and so many families, there’s almost nothing I can say to give comfort to anyone”.

Cottingham has claimed he was responsibl­e for up to 100 homicides. He has been imprisoned since 1980. He is known as the “Torso Killer” because he allegedly cut off the heads and limbs of some of his victims, authoritie­s have said.

Authoritie­s believe Cusick left her job at a children’s dance school and then stopped at the mall to buy a pair of shoes when Cottingham followed her out to her car. They believe he pretended to be a security guard or police officer, accused her of stealing and then overpowere­d the 98lb (44kg) woman. Cusick’s body was found on 16 February 1968.

The medical examiner concluded that Cusick had been beaten in the face and head and was suffocated. She had defensive wounds on her hands and police were able to collect DNA evidence at the scene. At the time, however, DNA testing did not exist.

Cottingham’s DNA was entered into a national database in 2016 when he pleaded guilty to a killing in New Jersey. In 2021, police in Nassau county began running DNA tests again on the cases involving the women and came up with a match to Cottingham.

Cottingham was working as a computer programmer for a health insurance company in New York at the time of Cusick’s death.

The other four women Cottingham confessed on Monday to killing were slain in 1972 and 1973.

Donnelly said that when detectives questioned Cottingham in prison, he provided informatio­n about those four cases that only the killer would know.

 ?? Photograph: Seth Wenig/AP ?? The prosecutor Jared Rosenblatt comforts Darlene Altman, daughter of Diane Cusick, as she readsa statement at a courtroom in Mineola, New York, on Monday.
Photograph: Seth Wenig/AP The prosecutor Jared Rosenblatt comforts Darlene Altman, daughter of Diane Cusick, as she readsa statement at a courtroom in Mineola, New York, on Monday.

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