| Detroit, Michigan – Present day
Bonnie Jordan insists over and over to anyone who will listen
that her sister Wendy, 39, was not a prostitute. Bonnie is convinced
that Wendy had put that part of her life behind her in the two years
she had been off drugs. Wendy was working a good job as a manager of
a gas station in the working class Detroit suburb of Royal Oak and
didn’t need to sell her body on the cold streets of Detroit,
Michigan.
“She may have been that in the past when she was doing
drugs,” Bonnie admitted. “But not when she died.”
“Wendy had been clean for two years,” she added.
The new millennium started on a tragic note for the Jordan
family. They had last seen Wendy at about 9 p.m. on New Year’s Day
when she left them at home and said she was “going out.” Wendy
never returned and the family learned two days later that the former
addict’s body had turned up in the dirty water of the Rouge River
in Dearborn Heights, an industrial area of Detroit known more for
its automobile plants than anything else.
Clearly, Wendy Jordan had met with foul play. She had been
strangled and her lifeless body had been thrown from a bridge into
the water.
In a strange twist, police would learn too late that they had
been closer than they ever would have thought to Jordan’s killer
– and if the red tape of bureaucracy had not slowed their
investigation, authorities might have been able to apprehend a
murderer before he had the chance to kill again.
As it stands now, however, a cautious Wayne County Prosecutor’s
office allowed the killer to remain on the loose and enabled him to
slay three more women, authorities said. Detroit area police are
convinced that the man they now have in custody is responsible for
those four killings, plus the murder of another reputed prostitute
in December 1999.
But John Eric Armstrong’s list of killings could spread far
beyond the city limits of Detroit, or even the continental United
States, for when authorities finally collared Armstrong after a
number of prostitutes reported that a man fitting his description
had been attacking them for weeks, the 26-year-old former Navy
seaman admitted to as many as 30 murders in countries such as
Thailand, Singapore, Korea, Israel, and Hong Kong.
Detroit police believe Armstrong's spree may have begun eight
years ago, when he joined the Navy in Raleigh, North Carolina.
Detroit police and the FBI are trying to match a list of Nimitz port
visits between 1992 and April 1999, when Armstrong was discharged
from the military, with a list of unsolved killings in cities across
the world. Detroit police believe they can link Armstrong to the
Detroit slayings and to three in Seattle, two in Hawaii, two in Hong
Kong, and one each in North Carolina, Thailand, Singapore and
Virginia. Other slayings may include prostitute strangulations in
Japan, Korea and Israel, police said.
If these killings turn out to be true – and there is some
evidence that Armstrong’s list of victims is not nearly as long as
he says, -- then the strawberry blond-haired, baby-faced 300-pound
aircraft refueler could be one of the most well-traveled serial
killers in history.
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