Bundy's Last Victim
by Robert A. Waters
The CNN series Death Row Stories "explores cases that pose hard questions about the U. S. capital punishment system." In other words, it's anti-death penalty. Here's a death row story of a different sort.
The morning was cool and rainy in Lake City, Florida. A town of about 10,000 souls, Lake City had somehow escaped the wild growth afflicting the rest of the state. The only notable thing that had ever happened there was the 1864 Battle of Olustee, when an invading Union army was repulsed by a rag-tag Confederate group of regulars, old men, and boys.
On the cold morning of February 9, 1978, twelve-year-old Kimberly Diane Leach was beaming. She'd just been elected first runner-up to the queen at Lake City Junior High School's annual Valentine's Day dance. A straight-A student, she was popular and smart. But as her class met in the gymnasium, Kimberly realized that she'd left her purse in her homeroom. She asked her teacher if she could go back and retrieve it, and was given permission.
Kimberly's homeroom was in a separate building, away from the gymnasium, and she had to walk across a field to get there.
Kimberly was reported missing when she didn't show up for her next class. There was little doubt that she'd been abducted, so lawmen quickly launched one of the largest searches in the history of Florida.
Later that day, an EMT who had been visiting the school told detectives that he had seen a young girl leaving with a man. The child seemed upset, but the witness assumed it was only a father who had come to pick up his daughter. The witness placed the time at around ten o'clock when the two got into a white van and drove away.
A few days later, on February 15, serial killer Ted Bundy was arrested 300 miles away, in Pensacola. Driving a stolen orange VW bug and presenting a fake name, Bundy was charged with several offenses, including automobile theft. He was soon identified as the notorious fugitive, and arrested by Tallahassee police for the brutal murders of Lisa Levy and Margaret Bowman, two college students at the Chi Omega sorority house.
Bundy was questioned by Lake City detectives about Kimberly Leach's disappearance, but refused to give out any information.
The search for Kimberly lasted for two months. Finally, on April 7, 1978, a state trooper found her body in an abandoned hog shed near the Suwannee River, about 40 miles from her school. She was partially decomposed and partly mummified. A bunched-up turtleneck sweater had been pulled around her neck, and the rest of her clothes scattered nearby. Her throat had been cut and she'd been strangled. In addition, she'd been sexually violated with a sharp object. Semen stains had been found on her underpants.
Medical Examiner Dr. Peter Lipkovic testified that Kimberly's death likely occurred during a brutal sexual assault. Her positioning indicated that "at the time when death occurred...most probably sexual intercourse was going on."
In the Time-Life book, Serial Killers, the authors write that "the coroner's inquest revealed a severe neck wound and massive damage to the pelvic region. These facts, and the position of the remains when they were found, implied that the child had been on her hands and knees when Bundy slit her throat from behind, as if he were butchering a hog."
In time, Ted Bundy confessed to more than thirty murders. Each victim had her own story, and each family was radically changed by the grief caused by senseless loss. Bundy was convicted in the Florida murders of Lisa Levy, Margaret Bowman, and Kimberly Leach and sentenced to death. After unsuccessfully attempting to ransom even more confessions for life in prison, Bundy met his fate in Old Sparky, Florida's electric chair.
Few Floridians mourned. On January 24, 1989, at exactly seven o'clock, disc jockeys all over the state played the sound of bacon frying. As if exorcising a demon from their midst, more than a thousand sign-holding demonstrators outside Florida State Prison at Raiford cheered when word came that Bundy was dead.
This is one of many death row stories that won't be featured on the CNN television show.