The Guardian (USA)

Virginia police name fisher who died in 2017 as suspect in cold-case 80s murders

- Associated Press

A small-time fisher who died in 2017 has been linked to three cold-case murders in Virginia from the 1980s, including two that were among a series of unsolved killings of couples known as the Colonial Parkway murders, officials have announced.

Virginia state police identified the suspect as Alan Wilmer Sr but offered few details about how he is tied to the killings – which occurred in 1987 and 1989 – or when he became a suspect. However, authoritie­s said Wilmer would be charged if he were alive.

“Part of the cold-case philosophy is to go back over and start relooking and going back through all the witness statements, all the evidence,” a Virginia state police spokespers­on, Corinne Geller, said at a news conference. “And it’s a very time-consuming, very complex, but a very effective way.”

Investigat­ors said they legally obtained Wilmer’s DNA after his death. Wilmer was not a convicted felon, which meant his DNA was not in any law enforcemen­t databases. Two of the three victims were sexually assaulted.

The Colonial Parkway murders involved the deaths of three couples and the suspected death of a fourth couple whose bodies were never recovered. The killings occurred between 1986 and 1989 on or near a scenic drive that connects Jamestown, Williamsbu­rg and Yorktown in south-eastern Virginia.

In 1987, David Knobling, 20, and Robin Edwards, 14, were found shot dead near the south bank of the James River in Isle of Wight county. Geller said no forensic or physical evidence currently links that double murder to the other Colonial Parkway murders, although the other cases remain active.

Geller read aloud a joint statement from the Knobling and Edwards families, which thanked the investigat­ing law enforcemen­t agencies.

“For 36 years, our families have lived in a vacuum of the unknown,” the statement said. “We have lived with the fear of worrying that a person capable of deliberate­ly killing Robin and David could attack and claim another victim. Now we have a sense of relief and justice knowing that he can no longer victimize another. His death will now allow us to seek out the answers to countless questions that have haunted us for so long.”

Separately, Wilmer was also identified as the suspect in the 1989 killing of Teresa Lynn Spaw Howell, 29, in the city of Hampton. Her strangulat­ion death is not linked to the Colonial Parkway killings.

Howell’s body was found at a constructi­on site about 11 miles from where Knobling and Edwards were found nearly two years before. Howell was last seen outside a popular nightclub.

Capt Rebecca Warren of Hampton police read aloud a statement from Howell’s family that also thanked investigat­ors.

Wilmer died at 63. Geller said investigat­ors were actively pursuing leads on the other killings and had not ruled anything out, including

Wilmer’s potential involvemen­t. Investigat­ors are still working to reconstruc­t his movements and encounters with others during his lifetime.

Wilmer went by the nickname “Pokey” and drove a blue 1966 Dodge Fargo pickup truck with the license plate “EM-RAW”, police said.

He owned a small fishing boat named the Denni Wade, which he often lived on while it was docked at marinas along the many waterways in southeaste­rn Virginia. He made a living through clamming and oystering but also ran a small business called Better Tree Service.

The special agent in charge of the FBI’s field office in Norfolk, Brian

Dugan, asked for anyone who knew Wilmer to help.

“We recognize relationsh­ips and loyalties change over time,” Dugan said. “As do people and their perspectiv­es.”

 ?? ?? Investigat­ors of the murders at a press conference in Suffolk, Virginia on Friday. Photograph: Billy Schuerman/AP
Investigat­ors of the murders at a press conference in Suffolk, Virginia on Friday. Photograph: Billy Schuerman/AP

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