Randall Woodfield
Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox criminal
Randall Brent Woodfield (born December 26, 1950) is an American serial killer, serial rapist, kidnapper, robber, burglar and former football player who was dubbed the I-5 Killer or the I-5 Bandit by the media due to the crimes he committed along the Interstate 5 corridor running through Washington, Oregon and California. Before his capture, Woodfield was suspected of multiple sexual assaults and murders. Though convicted in only one murder, he has been linked to a total of 18 murders and is suspected of having killed up to as many as 44 people.
A native of Oregon, Woodfield was the third child of a prominent Newport family. He began to exhibit abnormal behaviors during his teenage years and was arrested for indecent exposure while still in high school. An athlete for much of his life, Woodfield played as a wide receiver for the Portland State Vikings and was drafted by the National Football League in 1974 to play for the Green Bay Packers, but was cut from the team during training after a series of indecent exposure arrests.Template:Citation needed
In 1975, Woodfield began a string of robberies and sexual assaults on women in Portland, which he committed at knifepoint. Between 1980 and 1981, he committed multiple murders in cities along the I-5 corridor; his earliest-documented murder was that of Cherie Ayers, a former classmate whom he had known since childhood, in October 1980. After committing numerous violent crimes, Woodfield was arrested in March 1981, and convicted in June of the murder of Shari Hull and attempted murder of her co-worker, Beth Wilmot. He was sentenced to life imprisonment plus 90 years. In a subsequent trial, he was convicted of sodomy and improper use of a weapon in a sexual assault case, receiving 35 additional years to his sentence.
Woodfield has never confessed to any of the crimes of which he has been accused or convicted. Though he has only been convicted of one murder and one attempted murder, he has been linked via DNA and other methods to numerous unsolved homicides in the ensuing decades. Authorities have estimated his total number of killings to be as many as 44. CBS News named him one of the deadliest serial killers in American history.<ref name=cbs>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He is currently incarcerated at the Oregon State Penitentiary.
Early lifeEdit
ChildhoodEdit
Randall Woodfield was born on December 26, 1950,<ref name=warrant>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> in Salem, Oregon, the third child of an upper-middle-class family.Template:Sfn<ref name=nyd>Template:Cite news</ref> His mother was a homemaker, and his father was an executive at Pacific Northwest Bell.<ref name=eggers/> He has two older sisters,Template:Sfn one of whom went on to become a doctor and the other an attorney.<ref name=legacy/> The Woodfield family was "well-known and respected" in their community.<ref name=eggers/>
Woodfield was raised in Otter Rock, Oregon, a small seaside town approximately Template:Convert north of Newport.<ref name=eggers/> Popular among his peers, he was a football star at Newport High School.<ref name=eggers/> Though his childhood was by all accounts stable, Woodfield began to exhibit sexually dysfunctional behaviors during junior high school, particularly exposing himself in public.Template:Sfn While in high school, Woodfield exposed himself to a group of teenage girls on Yaquina Bay Bridge and was arrested.<ref name=eggers/> His football coaches helped conceal the incident to prevent him from being ousted from the team,<ref name=letters>Template:Cite book</ref> though his parents forced him to attend therapy after the incident.<ref name=si/>
College years and football careerEdit
After graduating from high school, Woodfield's criminal record was expunged and he attended Treasure Valley Community College in Ontario, Oregon, later transferring to Portland State University in Portland in 1970, where he played for the Portland State Vikings as a wide receiver.<ref name=eggers>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>Template:Sfn At Portland State, he was active in Campus Crusade for Christ, an evangelical Christian student group, and lived in an apartment located on the South Park Blocks.<ref name=eggers/>
Gary Hamblet, Woodfield's football coach, recalled: "When he was with me, he was the nicest, most gentlemanly kid I ever knew. He was quiet and polite, hard-working and real coachable."<ref name=eggers/> Other teammates and peers of Woodfield recalled him as "soft-spoken" and "kind of a loner" who "didn't have a lot of friends," but noted his athleticism.<ref name=eggers/>
Despite his thriving in college, Woodfield was arrested on several occasions for petty crimes: first in 1970 for vandalizing the apartment of his ex-girlfriend, and later in 1972 for public indecencyTemplate:Sfn in Vancouver, Washington.<ref name=legacy/> In 1973 he was arrested again for public indecency in Multnomah County, Oregon.<ref name=legacy/>
Woodfield chose to drop out of college three semesters shy of graduating with his B.S. in physical education, and was selected as a wide receiver in the 1974 NFL draft by the Green Bay Packers in the 17th round (428th pick).Template:Sfn<ref name=si>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Woodfield tried to establish himself with the Packers during Coach and General Manager Dan Devine's last season, but could not shake his problems with a trip across the country. He signed a contract in February 1974 but was cut during training camp, failing to make the team's final roster.<ref name=greenbay>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}Template:Dead link</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
After being cut by the Packers, Woodfield played the 1974 season with the semi-pro Manitowoc Chiefs and worked for Oshkosh Truck.<ref name=greenbay/>
First crime spreeEdit
Woodfield left Wisconsin in late 1974 and returned to Portland, feeling disgraced by his failure to maintain his football career.<ref name=cf>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In early 1975,Template:Sfn several Portland women were accosted by a knife-wielding man, forced to perform oral sex and then robbed of their handbags.<ref name=eggers/> Law enforcement responded to the string of crimes by having female police officers act as decoys.<ref name=cf/>
On March 3, 1975, Woodfield was arrested after being caught with marked money from one of the undercover officers. Upon interrogation he confessed to the crimes, blaming poor sexual impulse control, which he claimed was a result of his use of steroids.<ref name=cf/> In April 1975, Woodfield pled guilty to reduced charges of second-degree robbery. He was sentenced to ten years in prison, but was freed on parole in July 1979 after having served four years.<ref name=cf/>
Murders and subsequent crimesEdit
First murdersEdit
On October 9, 1980, Cherie Lynn Ayers, an X-ray technician and former classmate of Woodfield, was raped and murdered in her apartment at SW Ninth Place in downtown Portland.<ref name=legacy/> Her body was discovered on October 11 by her fiancé. She had been bludgeoned and stabbed repeatedly in the neck.<ref name=si/> Ayers, a University of Oregon graduate, had known Woodfield since second grade, having attended the same schools in Newport.<ref name=ayers>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
During Woodfield's prior four-year imprisonment, he and Ayers had corresponded via letters. Suspecting Woodfield's involvement in Cherie Lynn's murder, Ayers' family provided his name to law enforcement. He was questioned but refused to sit for a polygraph test.<ref name=ayers/> Homicide detectives found his answers generally "evasive and deceptive" but, because his blood type did not match semen found in the victim's body, no charges were filed.<ref name=ayers/>
One month later, on the morning of November 27 (Thanksgiving Day), Woodfield arrived at the north Portland home of Darcey Renee Fix, 22, planning to assault her.<ref name=si/> Woodfield had known Fix during college as an ex-girlfriend of one his close friends. Douglas Keith Altig, 24, was at Fix's home when Woodfield arrived. Both Fix and Altig were subsequently bound and shot to death execution-style in the home, and Fix's .32 caliber revolver was missing from the scene. Due to his acquaintance with Fix, Woodfield was questioned about the murders, but law enforcement found no concrete evidence pointing to his involvement.<ref name=si/>
I-5 Bandit robberiesEdit
After committing the murders of Fix and Altig, Woodfield began a series of robberies throughout the Pacific Northwest: On December 9, 1980, Woodfield, wearing a fake beard, held up a Vancouver, Washington, gas station at gunpoint.<ref name=si/> In Eugene, Oregon, four nights later, on December 13, he raided an ice cream parlor. On December 14, he robbed a drive-in restaurant in Albany, Oregon.<ref name=si/> During one of the robberies, Woodfield wore what appeared to be a Band-Aid or athletic tape across the bridge of his nose, similar to nasal strips worn by football players. On December 21, Woodfield (again wearing a false beard) accosted a waitress in Seattle, trapping her in a restaurant bathroom and forcing her at gunpoint to masturbate him.<ref name=si/>
By January 1981, law enforcement had dubbed the robber the "I-5 Bandit", given his apparent preference for committing crimes along the Interstate 5 corridor. On January 8, he held up the same Vancouver gas station he had robbed in December, this time forcing a female attendant to expose her breasts after he emptied the cash register. Three days later, on January 11, he robbed a market in Eugene. The next day, January 12, he shot and wounded a female grocery clerk at a store in Sutherlin, Oregon.Template:Citation needed
On January 14, a man matching the description of the I-5 Bandit and wearing a false beard invaded a home occupied by two sisters, aged eight and ten. He ordered the girls to undress and sexually assaulted them, forcing the older girl to perform fellatio. Four days later, in Salem, a man matching the same description entered an office building and sexually abused two women, Shari Hull and Beth Wilmot, after which he killed Hull and wounded Wilmot, leaving her for dead. On January 26 and 29, he traveled to southern Oregon and committed robberies in Eugene, Medford and Grants Pass. In the latter location, two females, a clerk and customer, were assaulted by the robber.Template:Citation needed
Later murdersEdit
On FebruaryTemplate:Spaces3, 1981, the bodies of Donna Eckard, 37, and her 14-year-old daughter, Janell Charlotte Jarvis, were found together in a bed in their home in Mountain Gate, California, north of Redding. Each had been shot several times in the head. Forensic tests showed that the girl had also been sexually assaulted. The same day in Redding, a female store clerk was kidnapped and raped in a holdup. An identical crime was reported in Yreka, California on February 4, with the same man robbing an Ashland, Oregon motel that night.
Then on February 9, in Corvallis, a man matching the I-5 Bandit's description held up a fabric store, molested the clerk and her customer before he left. Three days later, robberies committed by a man matching the I-5 Bandit's description occurred in Vancouver, Olympia, and Bellevue, Washington. The Olympia and Bellevue incidents included three sexual assaults.Template:Citation needed
Upon an impending visit to Portland, Woodfield planned a Valentine's Day party at the city's downtown Marriott Hotel, inviting friends and acquaintances from college.<ref name=legacy/> After no guests came, Woodfield drove to the Beaverton home of 18-year-old Julie Reitz, whom he had met while working as a bouncer at The Faucet, a bar in Portland. He arrived at her home around 2:00Template:Spacesa.m. on FebruaryTemplate:Spaces15. Around 4:00Template:Spacesa.m. he raped and then shot Reitz in the head, killing her.<ref name=legacy/> Police investigating the scene determined that Reitz had had a glass of wine with her attacker and had also begun to prepare coffee; a package of instant coffee was discovered on the kitchen counter, and water in a kettle had been left to completely boil away.<ref name=legacy/>
Arrest and trialsEdit
By February 28, the investigation was now focused on Woodfield, but by then the I-5 Bandit had struck three more Template:Nowrapin Eugene on FebruaryTemplate:Spaces18 and 21, and with another sexual assault in Corvallis on FebruaryTemplate:Spaces25. Detectives in Marion County assembled a call log showing Woodfield had placed calls via calling cards at payphones near the murder sites around the times they were committed.<ref name=si/>
On MarchTemplate:Spaces5, 1981, Woodfield was brought into the Salem Police Department for an interrogation after Lisa Garcia positively identified him in a photo lineup.<ref name=si/> His apartment in Springfield, Oregon, was subsequently searched two days later by warrant; inside, law enforcement discovered a spent .32 shell casing inside a racquetball bag, as well as a roll of tape that matched the tape found on the victims. On MarchTemplate:Spaces7, Woodfield was taken into custody after being positively identified by several Oregon robbery victims.<ref name=si/> On MarchTemplate:Spaces16, indictments for murder, rape, sodomy, attempted kidnapping, armed robbery, and illegal possession of firearms were initiated from various jurisdictions in Washington and Oregon.<ref name=si/>
In the summer of 1981, Woodfield was tried in Salem for the murder of Hull, as well as charges of sodomy and attempted murder (of Wilmot).<ref name=trial1>National News Briefs. United Press International, October 13, 1981, Tuesday, PM cycle.</ref> Wilmot testified against him in the trial, and was key in the prosecution's conviction.<ref name=legacy/> Chris Van Dyke, son of actor Dick Van Dyke, was the Marion County District Attorney at the time and prosecuted the case.<ref name=cf/> Van Dyke would later characterize Woodfield as "the coldest, most detached defendant I've ever seen."<ref name=legacy/> On JuneTemplate:Spaces26, 1981, after three-and-a-half hours of deliberation, Woodfield was convicted on all counts and sentenced to life in prison plus 90 years.<ref name=si/>
In October 1981, a second trial was held in Benton County, Oregon, in which Woodfield received sodomy and weapons charges tied to one of the attacks in a restaurant bathroom.<ref name=si/> Prior to this trial, his counsel attempted to move the trial from the Willamette Valley; he felt that, owing to the publicity the case received, Woodfield would not get a fair trial there.<ref name=pretrial>Judge refuses a change of venue for I-5 bandit suspect. United Press International, September 24, 1981, Thursday, PM cycle.</ref> The judge in the case denied counsel's request, along with a request to hypnotize a prosecution witness in an effort to determine if that witness had been influenced by the media coverage.<ref name=pretrial/> Woodfield was convicted by the jury, and had an additional 35 years added to his already-instated sentence.<ref name=si/>
Despite the apparent links with countless other crimes and homicides, Woodfield would not be prosecuted for the majority of the crimes he was believed to have committed. Unable to afford multiple trials, the State of Oregon was satisfied with Woodfield's existing life sentence.<ref name=trial1/>
Post-convictionEdit
Woodfield is serving his sentences at the Oregon State Penitentiary in Salem.<ref name=injury>Domestic News. United Press International, October 3, 1983, Monday, AM cycle.</ref> In October 1983, he was injured by a fellow inmate during a prison disturbance.<ref name=injury/> In April 1987, he filed a $12 million libel suit against Ann Rule,<ref name=suit>Tims, Dana. Murderer's libel suit dismissed. The Oregonian, January 18, 1988.</ref> the author who had written The I-5 Killer, an account of Woodfield's life and crime spree, in 1984. The Federal Court in Oregon dismissed the lawsuit in January 1988, citing that the statute of limitations on such a lawsuit had expired.<ref name=suit/>
By 1990, after the discovery of more victims, Woodfield was suspected in as many as 44 homicides.<ref>Burgess, Anthony. Book Review: The revenge of the failures with time to kill; 'The Serial Killers' - Colin Wilson & Donald Seaman: W H Allen, 6.99 pounds. The Independent, December 21, 1990.</ref> In 2001 and 2006, DNA testing linked Woodfield to two additional murders in Oregon that occurred from 1980 and 1981.<ref>Bernstein, Maxine. DNA links 'I-5 killer' to 1980 slaying. The Oregonian, February 9, 2006.</ref>
During his time in the penitentiary, Woodfield has married three times and divorced twice. Some letters he wrote from prison were sold online as a collection titled The Serial Killer Letters and published by The Charles Press.<ref name=greenbay/> In one of these letters, he wrote to journalist Jennifer Furio:
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Modus operandi and victim profileEdit
Template:Quote box The majority of Woodfield's victims were thin white women in their twenties, many of middle-class backgrounds.<ref name=si/> A great many of his victims—particularly in instances of robbery and sexual assault—were young employees of restaurants and convenience stores located along Interstate 5, which Woodfield traversed in his 1974 Champagne Edition gold Volkswagen Beetle.Template:Sfn In some instances, Woodfield's attacks were undertaken entirely at random, while in others, the murders were incited by rejected sexual advances.<ref name=si/> His level of acquaintance with his victims varied; some he knew personally, while others were complete strangers.<ref name=legacy/>
During his robberies, assaults, and killings, Woodfield typically concealed his identity by wearing a hoodie, a fake beard,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and most curiously, a strip of athletic tape across his nose.<ref name=si/> Police believe Woodfield may have done so to obscure his features and prevent victims from identifying him in a police lineup.<ref name=legacy/> His victims were typically killed via gunshot, and his crimes were sexually motivated.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Jim Lawrence, a detective for Portland's cold case unit, noted Woodfield's lack of remorse or responsibility in his crimes, saying: "If you’re talking about somebody moving toward some form of rehabilitation, they had to at some point acknowledge they are responsible for their own behaviors. That is not Randy Woodfield."<ref name=si/> Lawrence also noted Woodfield's egotism during his early interrogations: "When he was interviewed, he'd tell detectives that he'd never rape a girl. He said he didn't have to. They wanted him."<ref name=legacy/> Ann Rule, who documented Woodfield's crimes in The I-5 Killer, suggested that rejection and feelings of inadequacy were factors that drove him to violence, particularly against women.<ref name=legacy/> She also characterized Woodfield as a "smooth ladies' man" whose good looks and disposition aided his ability to trap victims.Template:Sfn
Unlike many serial killers, whose killing patterns are characterized by intervals or "cooling off periods," Woodfield's murders and other crimes escalated rapidly, increasing in successive frequency.<ref name=legacy/>
VictimsEdit
Woodfield never confessed to any of the murders of which he has been convicted, accused or to which he has been linked.<ref name=si/> Though convicted only in the murder of Shari Hull, Woodfield has been linked to numerous other murders via DNA and other methods; criminologists and detectives have provided estimated total numbers of killings ranging from 25<ref name=legacy/> to as many as 44 unsolved homicides.<ref name=cbs/><ref name=si/> Woodfield is also estimated to have committed at least 60 unsolved rapes.<ref name=nyd/> The following is a list of Woodfield's confirmed victims:
1980Edit
- October 9
- Cherie Lynn Ayers (29): A former classmate of Woodfield's; was found in her Portland home on October 11; was bludgeoned and stabbed multiple times in the neck.<ref name=si/>
- November 27
- Darcey Renee Fix (22) and Douglas Keith Altig (24): Both found shot to death with a .32 revolver in Fix's North Portland home.<ref name=may12>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- December 21
- Unnamed woman (25): Assaulted at gunpoint in a Seattle restroom, forced to masturbate Woodfield; survived.<ref name=si/>
1981Edit
- January 12
- Susie Benet (20): A market clerk in Sutherlin, Oregon, shot by Woodfield during robbery; survived.Template:Sfn
- January 18
- Shari Lynn Hull (20) and Beth Wilmot (20): Employees at a Transamerica office in Keizer, Oregon, accosted by Woodfield during their evening work shift; sexually assaulted both women before shooting them each in the head. Hull died of her injuries; Wilmot survived.<ref name=si/>
- February 3
- Unnamed woman (18): Kidnapped at gunpoint and raped near Redding, California in the morning hours; survived.<ref name=si/>
- Donna Lee Eckard (37) and daughter Janell Charlotte Jarvis (14): Both found sexually assaulted and shot to death in their Shasta County home.<ref name=may12/>
- February 4
- Unnamed woman: Kidnapped and raped in Yreka, California; survived.<ref name=si/>
- February 15
- Julie Ann Reitz (18): Raped and shot to death in her Beaverton, Oregon home around 4:00Template:Spacesa.m.;<ref name=legacy>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> was an acquaintance of Woodfield's through his job as a bartender.<ref name=si/>
Other possible victimsEdit
Retracing Woodfield's movements along Interstate 5, law enforcement have identified at least 25 other potential murders,<ref name=legacy/> while other estimations suggest up to 44.<ref name=si/> Notable is Martha Morrison (17), who disappeared in Eugene in September 1974 and was found murdered the following month near Vancouver; her remains were unidentified until 2015. Both Woodfield and Ted Bundy have been considered suspects in her murder.<ref name=morrison>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> However, after Morrison's remains were identified, law enforcement reached out to the public in an effort to encourage people to come forward with tips.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In August 2017, a bloodstain on a pistol owned by a longtime suspect, Warren Forrest, was matched to Morrison through DNA testing.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
During the spring of 1980, Marsha Weatter (19) and Kathy Allen (18) vanished while hitch-hiking from the Spokane, Washington, area to their hometown of Fairbanks, Alaska. Their bodies were found in May 1981, covered by several inches of ash from the May 18, 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens. Suspected serial killer Martin Lee Sanders was later connected to their murders,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> but as of 2018 the case remains unsolved.
In popular cultureEdit
In 2011, Woodfield was the subject of a Lifetime television film Hunt for the I-5 Killer, based on Ann Rule's book. In the film, Woodfield is portrayed by Canadian actor Tygh Runyan.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
See alsoEdit
- List of Portland State Vikings in the NFL draft
- List of serial killers in the United States
- List of serial killers by number of victims
ReferencesEdit
Works citedEdit
External linksEdit
- Excerpts of letters by Woodfield published in The Serial Killer Letters (1998)
Template:Green Bay Packers 1974 NFL draft picks Template:Authority control