Body Count (book)

Body Count: The Terrifying True Story of the Spokane Serial Killer is a non-fiction book released in December 2012 by Pinnacle Books and written by the crime writer Burl Barer about the American serial killer Robert Lee Yates from Spokane, Washington. It was first published in 2002, and then updated and re-released 10 years later.

Body Count
AuthorBurl Barer
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreNonfiction/True crime
PublisherPinnacle Books
Publication date
2012 (2nd ed), 2002
Media typePrint (paperback), e-book
Pages256 pp
ISBN978-0786029273
OCLC2003271224
364.15/23/0979737
LC ClassHV6533.W2 B37 2002

Storyline

Robert Lee Yates, Jr. was the father of five, an Air National Guard pilot who served in Desert Storm, and someone no one suspected as a killer. But at night, he prowled the streets where prostitutes gathered. The book follows the four-year investigation, describing it as a "process of elimination" to solve it. The book covers how Yates was finally caught and the effect Yates's double life had on his family.[1]

After a trial in 2002, Yates was convicted of killing two women and sentenced to death. In 2000, he pleaded guilty to 13 other murders and was given a sentence of 408 years.[2]

The author appeared in 2010 on BlogTalkRadio's "True Murder" show to talk about the book and the lengthy investigation, telling radio host Dan Zupansky that he gained access to the law enforcement task force that gave him a behind-the-scenes look to the investigation."[3]

Barer had a personal connection to the killer, as Yates's first victims were friends of the author's family in Walla Walla, Washington.[4]

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gollark: It gets equivocated to mean so many things, like "respect"; it is more of a fuzzy label for a set of related concepts than a precise technical definition.
gollark: Not sure it's their fault. Consciousness is just tricky.
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gollark: Wrong. It isn't the issue.

References

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