Saturday 16 April 2011

William flew over cali cill

The four Northern California women were killed during a period of 25 years and had little to unite them in addition to initial: Tram Driver Colon, Pamela Parsons, Roxen Roggasch and Tracy Tafoya.
Police in Nevada now believes that this may have been enough to make all the objectives of a mass murderer of women that were fed with alliterative names.
This is a conclusion that has targeted killing departments all over America to look back on their unsolved cases, particularly in the deaths of three young girls abducted and killed in the State of New York in the early 1970's.
As Joseph Naso, 77, of No, a photographer with a record for petty theft, appeared in court on Wednesday to be charged with the murders of four women in California, police in New York State sought to attach to the so-called "double initial murders. "
These are the cases of three young girls from the city of Rochester who were abducted, raped and strangled between 1971 and 1973. "The only link we have established so far was that he was in the area back in the time of the murder," Deputy Chief William Flew, Department Wayne County Sheriff, told the Times yesterday.
One victim has the same name as one of the victims in California: the tram drivers Colon, 10, was abducted and murdered in 1971. Two years later, Wanda Walkowicz and Michelle Maenza, both aged 11, were also found dead.
But for names, and the fact that it was learned that Mr. Naso, a native of New York State, was in Rochester, there is little to link the killings of children to women who were murdered in California. A DNA sample of the murders of New York joined Mr. Naso for the killings.
In court in Marin County, California, where Mr. Naso appeared on Wednesday, District Attorney Edward Berberian Jr said detectives had found "items that involved in multiple murders." He has been charged with four murders: Ms. Roggasch, 18, in 1977, Ms. Colon, 22, a year later, and the killings of Ms. Parsons, 38, in 1993, Ms. Tafoya, 31, in 1994. He did not enter a plea.
Mr. Naso had been living in a working class district of No, where neighbors remembered a curious man, was always assured that no eye contact with them saying. His ex-wife Judith, whom he separated in 1980 after 18 years of marriage, said he had asked not to speak to the press.

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