By Robert A. Waters
On July 9, 1957, Marjorie Hipperson had everything to live for. The night before, she and her fiance, Dr. Walter Dieke, attended an engagement party thrown by family and co-workers. Their wedding, scheduled for the following week, would be a dream come true for the industrious hospital nurse.
But as Marjorie lay sleeping in her Los Angeles home, a stranger forced open a window and entered. Later that morning, her husband-to-be found Marjorie raped and murdered. Detectives located an unidentified handprint on a wall above the head of the bed where she had been attacked.
For two years, investigators checked those prints against every new inmate who shuffled into the jail. None matched until Darryl Kemp raped a woman in Griffith Park. Cops soon located the car he had been seen driving and arrested him. He would later be tied to three other violent sexual assaults.
In 1960, a California court found Kemp guilty of first degree murder. According to the Associated Press, "Darryl T. Kemp was sentenced to die in the San Quentin gas chamber for strangling a nurse, Marjorie Hipperson, June 10, 1957."
Twenty-one years later, on the morning of November 14, 1978, Armida Wiltsey (pictured above), a 40-year-old mother, left home to go for a jog. She loved hiking and running the trails around the Lafayette, California reservoir, near her home. When she didn't pick up her daughter from school, a neighbor reported Armida missing. (Her husband was out of town on business.)
A few hours later, as cops searched into the night, deputies discovered her body. She lay a short distance from one of the trails, strangled to death. Her assailant had left semen for cops to save and process, but it would take decades to identify him. Thus began a thirty year search for her killer.
Had Kemp's original death sentence been carried out, Armida Wiltsey may have enjoyed life for many more years. But, in 1972, the California Supreme Court struck down the death penalty as unconstitutional. Five years later, the serial killer was released on parole and soon Armida lay dead near the reservoir trails she loved so much.
After her murder, Kemp fled to Texas where he was sentenced to life in prison for yet another series of rapes. After California investigators placed his DNA in CODIS, a national databank for offenders, he was identified as the killer of Armida.
Once again, Kemp was sentenced to death.
But once again, he escaped justice. Against the wishes of most Californians, who voted to reinstate the death penalty, Governor Gavin Newsome placed a moratorium on executions.
Now 88-years-old, Kemp still resides on California's death row.