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People v. Kraft8/10/2000 aled the presence of blood type B spermatozoa and semen, which could have come from either a person with type B blood or a nonsecretor. Inderbieten had type B blood and was a secretor; defendant is a nonsecretor.
Based on the location where the victim's body was found (i.e., near the 405 Freeway), the prosecutor argued to the jury that the entry "DART 405" on defendant's list referred to Inderbieten, although he was unable to assign meaning to the word "DART."
9. Murder of Keith Klingbeil
About 3:30 a.m. on July 6, 1978, a motorist traveling northbound on Interstate 5 between La Paz and Oso Parkway discovered a body, later identified as Keith Klingbeil, in the slow lane of the freeway. The body was warm when police arrived, death having probably occurred within one-half hour of the finding of the body. The body was clothed and wearing boots missing the left lace. The cause of death was determined to be acetaminophen overdose, with ligature strangulation a contributing factor. On the right side of Klingbeil's neck were ligature lines about three-fourths of an inch apart. There were road burns all over the body consistent with ejection from a moving vehicle. Around the time of death, he had been burned with a car cigarette lighter on the left nipple.
Klingbeil was a 23-year-old resident of Everett, Washington, who stood 5 feet 10 or 11 inches tall and weighed 150 to 160 pounds. He had hitchhiked from his home to Southern California. Four matchbooks were found in Klingbeil's pants, one of which came from a Chevron station on Lakewood Boulevard in Long Beach.
The prosecutor argued to the jury that the entry "HIKE OUT LB BOOTS" on defendant's list referred to Klingbeil, who, as noted, evidently had recently been in Long Beach and was wearing hiking boots at the time of death.
The defense presented evidence that, near the location where Klingbeil's body was found, Orange County Deputy Sheriff Christopher Leseburg was directed to investigate a Chevrolet pickup truck occupied by a lone male. On rebuttal, however, the prosecution demonstrated that the truck had been stopped around 2:30 or 3:00 a.m. due to an engine problem one-quarter mile short of the location of the body. The defense also showed that sheriff's employees had inadvertently destroyed evidence concerning the Klingbeil investigation.
10. Murder of Richard Keith
Richard Keith, a 20-year-old United States Marine stationed at Camp Pendleton, stood six feet two or three inches tall and weighed about 190 pounds. On Sunday, June 18, 1978, Keith was visiting at his girlfriend's mother's house near the intersection of Avalon Boulevard and the San Diego Freeway in Carson, Los Angeles County. According to the girlfriend, Keith may have been under the influence of drugs at that time. He left the house around 11:00 p.m. Keith had no car and had hitchhiked to his girlfriend's house.
At 5:15 a.m. the following day, a Los Angeles fireman discovered a nude body, later identified as that of Keith, lying off the side of Moulton Parkway one-half mile north of La Paz Road in Orange County. The body had been pushed out of a moving vehicle. The cause of death was ligature strangulation. Keith's blood-alcohol level at the time of death was 0.07 percent, and diazepam and flurazepam (a drug similar to, and somewhat more potent than, diazepam) were present in Keith's system in amounts sufficient to have rendered him very sleepy.
The prosecutor argued to the jury that the entry "MARINE CARSON" on defendant's list referred to Keith, who, as noted, was a Marine and was last seen in Carson.
11. Murder of Roland Young
About 8:19
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