You are in: CRIMINAL MIND/SEXUAL ASSAULT 
NORTHWEST SEX OFFENDERS
"FBI" Comes Knocking


Hank Eisses must have sighed when he answered the knock on his door at 7 p.m. on Aug. 26 this year.

At his threshold stood a human colossus—6-foot-5 and nearly 300 pounds—wearing a blue jogging suit and an FBI ball cap.

chapter continues
advertisement

FBI baseball cap
FBI baseball cap

Eisses was accustomed to law enforcement scrutiny of his home, at 2825 Northwest Ave. in Bellingham, a northwest Washington mill and university town of 71,000.

But this visit would prove to be something completely different.

Eisses, 49, was a registered sex offender, as were his two roommates, Victor Vazquez, 68, and James Russell, 42.

Hank Eisses
Hank Eisses

Born in Holland but a longtime resident of Whatcom County, Wash., Eisses had pleaded guilty in 1997 to raping an adolescent boy at his home near the Canadian border on several occasions after plying him with drugs and alcohol. He spent five years in prison and underwent sex offender treatment.

Map of Washington state with Whatcom County locator
Map of Washington state with Whatcom County locator

He was released in 2002 and bought his home with help from friends at a Bellingham church. Rent from his roommates helped pay the mortgage.

Vazquez, a New York City native who had moved west, was confronted by Washington authorities in the late 1980s with allegations that he had for years sexually abused his own children, boys and girls from infancy to age 14 at the time of his arrested. He pleaded guilty and spent 11 years in prison. He, too, was released in 2002 and moved in with Eisses, whom he apparently met through sex-offender treatment.

They were joined 2003 by Russell, who had been imprisoned for nine years on a 1994 conviction for the sexual assault of a 3-year-old girl. Like Vazquez, Russell was a serial sex offender, with at least six victims, all infants or toddlers.

Their criminal histories were no secret in Bellingham.

In 1990, Washington became the first state to authorize registration and public notification about sex offenders under its Community Protection Act. The law also allows unlimited civil commitment for sexual deviants who are judged dangerous even after they have completed their full criminal sentences.

As in 46 other states, photographs of and addresses for Washington's sex offenders are readily available on various law enforcement Web sites.

The Whatcom County sheriff's site listed Eisses, Vazquez and Russell as Level III offenders, the most likely to lapse into further sexual deviance. Even a computer novice could have determined in a matter of minutes that the three men lived together at the home in the 2800 block of Northwest Avenue.

And that is what brought the giant in the FBI cap to their door.







TEXT SIZE
CHAPTERS
1. Joseph Duncan's Impact

2. False Promise of Sex-offender Registries

3. "FBI" Comes Knocking

4. Threats Reported

5. Executions

6. Quick Arrest

7. Crying Out for Help

8. Sex Offender Hit List

9. Blogging His Thoughts

10. Self-Pity and Blaming Society

11. "Jet" Duncan

12. I Am Already a New Person

13. Sexual Tales

14. Lost Opportunity to Commit

15. School Days

16. $15,000 Bail

17. Sex Registries

18. A Better Strategy?

19. Resources

20. Return to Full Coverage

21. Joseph Duncan Feature Story

22. The Author


<< Previous Chapter 1 - 2 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 - 9 - 10 - 11 - 12 - 13 - 14 - 15 - 16 - 17 - 18 - 19 - 20 - 21 - 22 >> Next Chapter
Joseph Edward Duncan III
Westley Allan Dodd
Marc Dutroux
Albert Fish
Clifford Olson
Jesse Pomeroy


truTV Shows
The Investigators
Forensic Files
Suburban Secrets



TM & © 2007 Courtroom Television Network, LLC.
A Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved.
CrimeLibrary.com is a part of the Turner Entertainment New Media Network.
Terms & Privacy Guidelines
 
advertisement