Vickie Lynn Harrell was from Linton, Indiana. She was 25 years old
and lived in Bloomington. Working as a clerk at k-mart in 1972, she was
recently divorced. Some reports mentioned that she was a mother, while
others leave no mention of her personal life.
Vickie Lynn Harrell was reported missing after not returning home on
August 12, 1972. Her roommate reported her missing. It seems as though,
in typical seventies fashion, the police immediately wrote the woman off
as a run away or that she left on her own accord. From newspaper
articles at the time, or really the lack thereof, there was no search
for the missing woman. The only one searching was her poor roommate.
The day before what would have been her 26th birthday, Vickie was
found by a member of the Owen County Highway Department. Her naked body
was discovered at 1:30 on August 14, 1972. Her clothing or any of her
belongings were not found with the body. Her car was found at a shopping
center.
The body was three miles from Spencer. It was apparent from the area
that the body had been dumped in the water filled ditch and that the
murder had not been committed in this area. Upon examination of the
body, it was determined that she had been raped and strangled. Initials
had also been carved into Vickie's torso.
As quickly as Vickie's story became news, it quickly faded from the
papers. Owen County had a lot happen that year. The investigation was
put on the back burner because the jail caught fire, there was a jail
break, and a suicide occurred at the jail. According to the "lead
investigator" the Sheriff's department was under staffed.
Yet, three other agencies were also investigating the case and made
no progress. Part of this is because Vickie was painted to be an unwed
mother who was a known drinker and the public had no sympathy. Out of
the four agencies, the Owen County Sheriff's Department, Bloomington
Police, Monroe County Sheriff's Office, and the State Police, one of
them believed that Vickie's killer was already confined to a mental
facility and was untouchable as of 1974.
When Lt. Ralph Shumaker, of the Indiana State Police, took over the
case he was working on a theory. The transient theory was a favorite. It
was believed that Vickie might have fallen victim to a serial killer.
Similar murders allegedly occurred in Pennsylvania and Maryland between
1969-1971, I was unable to find these when going through newspaper
archives. The murders had the same method of killing and the victims
were all taken from college towns. The bodies all had initials carved
into them, but they were different letters.
With so much time gone, it is hard to believe and maintain hope that
Vickie's case will ever be solved. In hopes that someone knows
somethings and is ready to talk, I ask that anyone with information on
Vickie's case to call the Indiana State Police.
_____________Sources_________________
"Columnist Calls for Jury Probe." The Terre Haute Tribune. January 1974.
"Initials Carved in Woman's Body." Journal and Courier. Lafayette, Indiana. August 1972.
"ISP Detective Asks Public to Help Solve Case." Stevens, Howard. The Terre Haute Tribune. October 1972.
"Murder Victim Also Raped." Anderson Herald. Anderson, Indiana. August 1972.
"Nude, Mutilated Body of Missing Woman is Found." The Indianapolis Star. August 1972.
"Slain Woman Formerly Lived Here." Linton Daily Citizen. Linton, Indiana. August 1972.
"Young Clerk's Death Still Haunts Lawmen." The Indianapolis News. September 1973
I can’t help but wonder if the KN was supposed to be K-Mart and it was too hard to finish.
ReplyDeleteI have read that KN were the first two letters of the last name of the suspect who was committed to the mental institution in Kentucky.
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