LANSING, Kan.
(AP) — The bodies of the two men executed for the 1959 murders of a
Kansas family that became infamous in Truman Capote's true-crime book
"In Cold Blood" were exhumed Tuesday in an effort to solve slayings of a
Florida family killed weeks later.
Kyle Smith, deputy director of
the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, said bone fragments were collected
from the skeletal remains of Richard Hickock and Perry Smith, who were
hanged for the murders of Herb and Bonnie Clutter and their children in
Holcomb, Kan., on Nov. 15, 1959.
The fragments were collected at
the request of a Sarasota County Sheriff's detective, who has been
trying to determine whether Hickock and Perry Smith were responsible for
the deaths of Cliff and Christine Walker and their two young children
on Dec. 19, 1959, in their home in Osprey, about four hours northwest of
Miami near Sarasota. Smith and Hickock fled to Florida after the
Clutter murders.
Hickock and Perry Smith have been considered suspects in the Walker
slayings since 1960, and Kyle Smith said Florida officials have
expressed an interest several times over the decades in renewing the
investigation. DNA testing now has advanced enough that older material
can be analyzed more effectively, he said."We can get smaller samples, more decayed samples, and still get matches," Kyle Smith said during a news conference at the city hall in Lansing. "They could have tried this 20 years ago and maybe used up what biological samples they had and gotten nothing from it."
Sarasota County detective
Kimberly McGath said she requested the exhumation to obtain DNA that
could be compared to that from semen found on Christine Walker's
underwear. All the Walkers were shot. Christine Walker also was beaten
and raped. Their 2-year-old daughter also was drowned in a bathtub.
"Our interest is providing
closure to the Walker family," Kyle Smith said. "Obviously, where these
perpetrators are dead, it's not going to result in any prosecution."
He added: "Obviously, there's a lot of historical interest as well."
Hickock and Perry Smith fled to
Florida in a stolen car after the Clutter murders. They checked out of a
Miami Beach motel on Dec. 19, the day the Walker family was killed, and
at some point that day bought items at a Sarasota department store.
Witnesses have said they spoke with Smith and Hickock in Tallahassee on Dec. 21.
McGath said the Walkers were
considering buying a 1956 Chevy Bel Air, the kind of car Smith and
Hickock were driving through Florida. McGath thinks the Walkers met with
the men because of the car.
Smith and Hickock were later
arrested in Las Vegas. A polygraph test cleared them of the Walker
murders, but a polygraph expert said in 1987 that such tests were
worthless in the early 1960s.
"Sometimes you just have to wait for the technology to catch up to the need," Kyle Smith said.
Hickock and Perry Smith are
buried on a gently sloping hill at the Mount Muncie Cemetery in Lansing,
where the state of Kansas interred executed criminals when their
families didn't claim the bodies. The cemetery regularly draws visitors
who have read Capote's book or have seen a movie about him or the case.
The exhumation began shortly
after sunrise Tuesday and ended by noon. Bone samples were collected,
and the bodies reburied, Kyle Smith said. Reporters and other members of
the public weren't invited to view the work because investigators were
treating the graves as crime scenes.
"It went about as well as it could have," cemetery manager Gene Kirby said. "There were no surprises."
The KBI will take DNA from what
was bone marrow, Kyle Smith said. He said one of its labs will do the
analysis behind higher-priority tests for criminal cases about to go to
trial, and he wasn't sure how long it would take.
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