Karen Lynn Tomkins
More
than 50 years later, the cases are unsolved…
by
Robert A. Waters
On
July 3, 1962, eleven-year-old Dorothy Gale Brown (called Gale) was
reported missing from Torrance, California. Her bicycle lay on the
sidewalk a block from her home, but the child was nowhere to be found.
Police
immediately suspected she’d been kidnapped because of a previous
abduction. Karen Lynn Tompkins, also 11, had disappeared from almost
the exact same spot a year before. Karen’s case was still
unsolved.
A
massive search for Gale turned up nothing until July 6 when the
Torrance
Herald
reported that “the nude body of the girl was discovered by skin
divers near Corona del Mar about noon Wednesday. It was floating in
a kelp bed about 150 yards off shore.”
The
article continued, “About an hour and a half before the body was
discovered, the 12-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Shanklin, Long Beach, found the girl’s white dress stuffed in a
beer can in the water at Tin Can Beach. The dress was taken home and
laundered by Mrs. Shanklin, who said she knew nothing about Gale’s
disappearance at the time. After reading about the disappearance in
the newspapers, Mrs. Shanklin turned the dress over to police. Mr.
and Mrs. Brown identified it here Friday morning. A pink plastic hair
band was discovered later. It was also in a beer can near Tin Can
Beach. Police have questioned several known sex offenders in the
area…”
The
coroner stated that Gale had been in the water for six to eight
hours, and that she’d drowned.
Gale’s parents, William and Charlene Brown, were so distraught that they offered to give their daughter’s clothes to a needy child. Gale was buried, but not before the pastor prayed for her killer to be caught and “punished as he ought to be.”
In
the first two years after Gale’s murder, the Torrance Police
Department interviewed thousands of people. All known sex offenders
in the area were grilled—several were given lie detector tests and
“truth serum.” All were eliminated as suspects.
Karen
Lynn Tomkins was never found, and is still missing today. Dorothy
Gale Brown’s murder remains unsolved.
A
child-rapist and serial killer named Mack Ray Edwards roamed
California in the 1950s and 1960s raping and murdering children. He
confessed to killing six children and was convicted of the murders of
Stella Darlene Nolan, 8, Gary Rochet, 16, and Donald Allen Todd, 13.
Edwards
also confessed to killing Donald Lee Baker, 15, and Brenda Jo Howell,
12, who were kidnapped from Azusa in 1956. He was not charged
because their bodies were never found. He claimed to have killed one
other victim, fifteen-year-old Roger Dale Madison.
Did
Edwards also murder Dorothy Gale Brown and Karen Lynn Tomkins? Police suspected as much, but were never able to prove a connection.
Sentenced
to death, Edwards hung himself in San Quentin Prison in 1971.
His
many sordid secrets were buried with him.
I am the sister of Karen Lynn Tompkins. I am happy to find this site.
ReplyDeleteWe are still looking for Karen. I am relieved others have not forgotten
her. Lori Tompkins Buck
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