Jamie Rose Bolin
It Can't Come Soon Enough
By Robert A. Waters
How did a normal ten-year-old girl wander into a madman's evil fantasy? Jamie Bolin happened to live in the same apartment complex as Kevin Ray Underwood, 26, who became obsessed with kidnapping a young girl, raping her, cutting her up, cooking her, and dining on her corpse. As his demented fetish grew, he spied on Jamie, learning everything about her typical daily movements.On the afternoon of April 12, 2006, Underwood lay in wait. When his victim returned home from school, he invited Jamie into his apartment. The naive child entered and was never seen alive again.
Jamie attended fifth grade at Purcell Intermediate School in Purcell, Oklahoma. The Purcell Register reported that "Jamie Rose lived with her father, Curtis Bolin, in an apartment across the breezeway from Underwood's downstairs unit. Underwood lured Jamie into his apartment to see his pet rat, Freya, and watch a SpongeBob cartoon video. Once she was inside, he battered her skull and back with a wooden cutting board before choking her and cutting her throat in an apparent attempt to decapitate her."
He lugged her bicycle, which she had been riding, into his home and dismantled it. Hiding the components and parts underneath his bed, he hoped it would stay hidden until the investigation died.
During this time, Underwood began acting in a suspicious manner. He told his father, who had come to visit, that he may have been the last person to see Jamie alive. He said he'd seen her walking toward the school library a couple of blocks away. As soon as detectives heard this, they called Underwood in to the precinct for an interview. It didn't go well. He told FBI agents she wore a short-sleeve blue shirt as she rode her bicycle although cops had heard from several witnesses that she'd been wearing a pink shirt.
FBI agents and local cops were now swarming the complex, interviewing hundreds of residents. Because of Underwood's inconsistent statements, agents asked the suspect if they could search his home. Underwood agreed. Court documents read: "While looking around the apartment, [Agent Craig Overby] saw a large plastic storage tub in appellant's closet. Its lid was sealed with duct tape."
The child's body lay in the bottom of the barrel, covered by her clothes, including the blue shirt mentioned by Underwood.
It didn't take long for Underwood to confess. Purcell Police Chief David Tompkins told reporters "this appears to have been a plan to kidnap a person, torture them, kill them, cut off their head, drain the body of blood, rape the corpse, eat the corpse, then dispose of the organs and bones."
To back up his confession, investigators found the following items in Underwoods' home: barbecue skewers, a meat tenderizer, numerous knives and swords, a wooden cutting board, and rolls of duct tape.
Before her brutal murder, Jamie loved singing, sewing, riding her bike as well as four-wheelers, and watching movies.
There was no doubt about his guilt. Underwood was convicted of first degree murder, and the jury found the crime to be "especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel." He received the death penalty.
Now, after nearly 20 years, the killer's execution is approaching. Surprisingly, hundreds of people oppose his "murder by the state." As of this date, the Action Network has received 1,536 signatures in a petition to spare Underwood's life.
The website reads: "During questioning, Kevin confessed to developing a desire to abduct someone, molest them, eat their flesh, and dispose of their remains. Although he tragically succeeded in killing Jamie, he was unable to carry out his cannibalistic and sexually deviant fantasies...Since Kevin's confession and sentencing, numerous concerns have been raised about his mental health. He has a documented history of severe mental illness, including depression. Initially diagnosed with schizotypal personality disorder, Kevin was recently re-diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome, which is a form of Autism Spectrum Disorder. This developmental condition is characterized by diminished cognitive empathy, difficulties in social interaction and emotional regulation, and poor impulse control. Kevin's mental health struggles led him to live a reclusive lifestyle and develop increasingly disturbing fantasies."
Jamie's last words haunted cops and jurors alike.
"I'm sorry," she said. "My God, I'm sorry."
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