John Fautenberry
John Joseph Fautenberry (July 4, 1963 - July 14, 2009) was an American serial killer. A long-haul trucker, Fautenberry befriended and subsequently murdered five people across four states between 1990 and 1991,[1][2] and after his arrest, confessed to an additional 1984 murder for which another man was convicted. He was sentenced to death for one of his killings, and subsequently executed at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in 2009.[3]
John Fautenberry | |
---|---|
Born | John Joseph Fautenberry July 4, 1963 New London, Connecticut, U.S. |
Died | July 14, 2009 46) | (aged
Cause of death | Execution by lethal injection |
Conviction(s) | Murder x5 |
Criminal penalty | Death (Ohio) Life imprisonment (New Jersey) 99 years imprisonment (Alaska) |
Details | |
Victims | 5–6 |
Span of crimes | 1990–1991 (possibly 1984) |
Country | United States |
State(s) | Oregon, New Jersey, Ohio, Alaska |
Date apprehended | March 17, 1991 |
Early life
Born on July 4, 1963 in New London, Connecticut,[n 1] Fautenberry was the illegitimate son of a Navy seaman. Rejected by his father and grandparents, young John was placed in the care of his mother, who went on to marry twice more. Sadly, he was also ignored by his stepfathers, suffering beatings for the smallest of mistakes, once for confusing a potato salad with tomato salad. According to Fautenberry, he would use an imaginary hammer to nail his and his sister's blankets to the beds, in an effort to not get taken away by malicious forces.[4] The family often changed residences, shifting between Ohio and Hawaii before moving to North Kingstown, Rhode Island in 1983.[5] By that time, Fautenberry had already had scrapings with the law: he had stolen a 1968 Chrysler in Atlanta, but was later captured in Heflin, Alabama after leaving a gas station without paying for gas.[6]
In 1985, his mother passed away from cancer, leading Fautenberry to become even more disillusioned and untrustworthy of people, with him developing a growing addiction to drugs and alcohol.[4] In order to support himself, he held several short-term jobs as a long-haul trucker, travelling all across the United States, but was often fired for poor performance and negligence.[7] By the time his murders began, he acquired several more convictions for minor offenses, including carrying a concealed weapon in Ohio and a public disturbance charge in Ledyard, Connecticut.[5]
Murders
Fautenberry's first confirmed victim was 47-year-old Donald 'Don' Nutley, from Waco, Texas. The pair crossed paths in November 1990 at a truck stop in Troutdale, Oregon, and upon learning that Nutley was going to Mount Hood for target practice, John offered to accompany him.[8] Don agreed, and the two men traveled to the area, where Nutley promptly vanished.[9] His disappearance remained a mystery until April 21, 1991, when his teeth and skull, complete with a bullet hole, were found in a wooded area northeast of rural Zigzag.[10]
On February 1, 1991, Fautenberry encountered 27-year-old fellow trucker Gary Farmer, from Springfield, Tennessee, at the Pilot Truck Stop in Bloomsbury, New Jersey, not far from the I-78.[11] According to John, Gary supposedly made unwanted sexual advances on him, because of which he killed him in retaliation, robbing Farmer of a knife, watch and $40,[12] before leaving his body in the truck's sleeping compartment. Farmer's body was found on February 5th and remained unidentified for a few days, and after his identity was recovered,[11] authorities released a sketch of a man wanted for questioning in his death. According to his employers, CPA America, Farmer was on a cross-country route bound for Hunterdon County at the time of his death.[13] At the time of the murder, Fautenberry was travelling towards Zion, Illinois, and had stopped at the truck stop to buy some breakfast.[5]
Sixteen days later, 45-year-old Joseph Daron, Jr., a divorced father and data supervisor at the Community Mutual Blue Cross & Shield, went missing from his Miami Township home in Ohio, after dropping off his two daughters at their mothers' home in Union Township.[14] Two days after, a co-worker filed a missing persons report.[15] After some time passed, Daron still hadn't been located, but, strangely enough, his white 1988 Subaru had been spotted in Portland and Idaho, in addition that his credit cards had been used a total of 25 times by none other than Fautenberry himself.[16] On March 20th, a motorist pulled off the road near River Downs in Anderson Township, finding the body of a man. Judging by the man's clothing and physical description, it was quickly concluded that the deceased was Joseph Daron.[17] Posing as a hitchhiker, Fautenberry was picked up by the good-natured Daron, proceeding to kill and rob him afterwards.[18]
Using Daron's car, Fautenberry criss-crossed through several states before finding himself at a party in Portland on February 23rd, where he met 32-year-old local bank teller Christine Anne Guthrie.[19] She agreed to accompany John to the coastal Silver Sands Motel in Rockaway Beach,[5] where the pair were seen by hotel owner Anna Modrell.[20][7] Following their meet-up, Guthrie vanished, with her body found on April 1st near the remote logging community of Timber.[21] She had died from gunshot wounds to the head.[19]
From there, Fautennerry drove to the Seattle–Tacoma International Airport, abandoning Daron's car at the parking lot.[22] He bought a one-way ticket to Juneau, Alaska, arriving there on March 2nd or 3rd, finding work on a fishing boat and moving into the downtown Bergman Hotel.[23] On March 14th, he was hanging out at a rural bar, having been fired from his job at the fishing boat, when he came across 39-year-old Jefferson "Jeff" Diffee, a miner who worked at the Greens Creek silver mine.[24] The two struck up a conversation, and Jeff, feeling sorry for the newcomer who wasn't accustomed to the Alaskan wilderness, invited John to his condominium. There, Fautenberry proceeded to beat and stab him 17–18 times, before stealing Diffee's wallet, automatic teller machine and 9mm handgun. The following day, he withdrew $400 from Jeff's account, a move noted by authorities.[24] In the meantime, co-workers had filed a missing persons report for Diffee, who hadn't gone to work in two days.
Arrest, trial and imprisonment
Three days after killing Diffee, Fautenberry, who had been under surveillance since his linkage to Joseph Daron's stolen car,[25] was arrested at his hotel room in Juneau. Jeff's bank card was found in his hotel room as well.[26] During the course of his interrogations, Fautenberry confessed a total of six murders, including the 1984 stabbing death of 25-year-old hobo Richard F. Combs in Roseburg, Oregon. According to Fautenberry, the two met in a park and began drinking, and as John drank more, he got angrier at the fact that he had recently been fired from his job. In a fit of rage, he supposedly stabbed Combs in the throat and dumped his body on the freeway.[27] However, another man was already serving a sentence for that crime: 28-year-old Michael T. Collier had confessed and plead guilty to manslaughter in the Combs case, but had since recanted. The lead concerning Fautenberry was investigated, but in the end, it was abandoned.[28] He was also briefly considered a suspect in the Dr. No murders due to his job as a long-haul trucker, and even questioned about the slaying of a fellow truck driver in New York, but was eventually cleared of suspicion.[29][30] After a tape-recorded telephone interview with WKRC-TV, in which he confessed to four of his murders, Fautenberry attempted suicide by cutting his wrist with a razor, but was found on time and saved.[31]
During his imprisonment, Fautenberry was profiled as a serial killer according to the FBI's definition, with newspapers drawing comparisons to other murderers, such as Ted Bundy, Richard Biegenwald and the recently-captured Eric Napoletano.[32] Fautenberry himself denied being one, as he believe he didn't fit the criteria, as he murdered for money, not for sexual or personal satisfaction.
Fautenberry was held at the Lemon Creek Correctional Center, initially on a $1 million bail,[33] which was increased to $3 following additional charges.[34] He was indicted for the murders of Diffee, Farmer and Daron, and was first to stand trial in Alaska. In exchange for the other charges being dropped, he plead guilty to killing Diffee and was given a 99-year prison term in Alaska.[35] He was then extradited to Ohio, where he was sentenced to death for the murder of Joseph Daron, and sent off to await execution at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility.[36][37] In September of that year, he was extradited to New Jersey, where he plead guilty to manslaughter in the Farmer case, and was given a life imprisonment term.[38][39]
Execution
Following his death sentence, as per Ohio law, Fautenberry automatically filed for appeal on several occasions, but every time, he was unsuccessful.[40] By 2008, when he had exhausted all of his state and federal appeals, prosecutor Joe Deters formally requested his execution.[38] His bids for parole were also denied, as a result of protest from family members of his victims.[41] On July 14, 2009, he was executed by lethal injection at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility, about two hours after the Supreme Court denied a final request to delay the procedure.[3]
See also
External links
Notes
- One source claims that he was born in Groton
References
- "Suspect in 5 Slayings Described as 'Normal'". Daily Sitka Sentinel. March 22, 1991.
- David P. Willis and Lee McDonald (April 7, 1991). "Following a trail of death". Courier News.
- "Ohio executes John Fautenberry, the trucker who went on a killing spree". The Plain Dealer. July 14, 2009.
- John Hopkins (September 15, 1992). "Fautenberry talks of troubled past". The Cincinnati Enquirer.
- "Deaths". Courier News. April 7, 1991.
- "Ranburne police arrest Hawaii man". The Anniston Star. December 19, 1982.
- Sheila McLaughlin (March 24, 1991). "Suspect liked women, parties". The Cincinnati Enquirer.
- "Body of Texan Sought in Suspected Serial Killings". Daily Sitka Sentinel. March 26, 1991.
- "Missing Texan may be the fifth victim". The World. March 26, 1991.
- "Police identify remains found near Mt. Hood". Statesman Journal. April 23, 1991.
- "Man's body found in tractor-trailer". Courier News. February 7, 1991.
- "Killer denies charges in N.J." Statesman Journal. September 25, 1992.
- "Sketch released in slaying case". Courier News. February 9, 1991.
- Sheila McLaughlin (March 20, 1991). "Police say body is missing man, Page 2". The Cincinnati Enquirer.
- Sheila McLaughlin (March 12, 1991). "Disappearance tied to suspected slaying, Page 2". The Cincinnati Enquirer.
- Sheila McLaughlin (March 12, 1991). "Disappearance tied to suspected slaying". The Cincinnati Enquirer.
- Sheila McLaughlin (March 20, 1991). "Police say body is missing man". The Cincinnati Enquirer.
- Sheila McLaughlin (March 24, 1991). "Kind act may have meant death". The Cincinnati Enquirer.
- "Body IDed as alleged Fautenberry victim". The Daily News. April 3, 1991.
- Sheila McLaughlin (March 24, 1991). "Kind act may have meant death, Page 2". The Cincinnati Enquirer.
- "Body may be victim of suspected killer". Albany Democrat-Herald. April 2, 1991.
- Sheila McLaughlin (March 19, 1991). "Suspect in disappearance questioned, Page 2". The Cincinnati Enquirer.
- David P. Willis (March 27, 1991). "Man charged in trucker's killing in Hunterdon". Courier News.
- Brian S. Akre (March 19, 1991). "Juneau Police Arrest Suspect in Murders". Daily Sitka Sentinel.
- Sheila McLaughlin (March 15, 1991). "Suspect in disappearance indicted on theft charges". The Cincinnati Enquirer.
- Sheila McLaughlin (March 19, 1991). "Suspect in disappearance questioned". The Cincinnati Enquirer.
- "Fautenberry Confesses To Killing Juneau Man". Daily Sitka Journal. June 18, 1991.
- David P. Willis (April 11, 1991). "Slaying suspect tied to 6th death". Courier News.
- Mickey Higgenbotham (March 22, 1991). "Suspect seen as possible truck-stop stalker". The Cincinnati Enquirer.
- Mickey Higgenbotham (March 22, 1991). "Suspect seen as possible truck-stop stalker, Page 2". The Cincinnati Enquirer.
- Brian S. Akre (May 17, 1991). "Suspect in 6 Slayings Tried Suicide in Jail Cell". Daily Sitka Sentinel.
- Kathy Balog (April 7, 1991). "The marks of a serial killer are elusive". Courier News.
- Lee McDonald (March 22, 1991). "Cops find suspect in death of trucker". Courier News.
- Kathie Flannery (March 30, 1991). "Suspect in shooting indicted in Alaska". Courier News.
- "Man charged in Hunterdon killing gets 99-year term in Alaska". Courier News. August 22, 1991.
- "Multiple killer gets death sentences". Albany Democrat-Herald. September 16, 1992.
- "Convicted killer sentenced to death in Ohio". Statesman Journal. September 17, 1992.
- "Ohio prosecutor requests execution in murder spree". Journal-News. December 2, 2008.
- David P. Willis (September 9, 1993). "Convicted killer gets one more life term". Courier News.
- "Fautenberry death sentence upheld". Courier News. February 10, 1994.
- "Killer: Kin of victims fight parole". The Cincinnati Enquirer. June 17, 2009.