| George Russell's psyche gorged on grudges. Spending most of his
pre-adolescent life as a roaming cat burglar in the Seattle,
Washington suburbs, he stole to get even, not with the people he
ripped off, but with the world. Petty robbery, however, was not
enough. The indelible mark of hate that he felt he needed to impress
on the surface of mankind – or, rather, womankind -- could
not flush up until he found the outlet to do so. All his life he had
been looking for a spigot to vent, whether he realized it or not. At
the age of consent, when the singles bars opened their doors to him,
and when he was able to "blend" with the people whom he
realized were symbols of his loathing, George Russell crossed the
danger line.
"Russell, convicted of murdering three women in Bellevue
(Washington State) in a two-month span...killed his first victim in
an alley, but the next two in their homes," writes Richard
Seven, a Seattle Times reporter. "The MO or modus
operandi changed, but each woman's body was found grotesquely
posed, an obvious and rare signature that revealed his distinct
compulsion."
Signature killers, driven by something erratic, erotic and
lethal, become assassins warring against their own mania. Their
battleground is often the most unsuspecting place in urban or rural
America, often where the killer grew up. Figures of pent-up
frustration, predominantly sexual, they reach an age, or encounter
an incident, that pushes them across what signature killer authority
Robert Keppel calls "the comfort zone – the edge of normalcy
and the borderline of criminality".
Dr. Robert Keppel, author of Signature Killers and
former chief investigator for the Washington State Attorney
General's Office, personally studied and took part in the
trials of landmark killers Ted
Bundy, Jeffrey
Dahmer and George Russell. His knowledge of anger-driven
prototypes who leave their "personal mark" upon
their crime scenes is vast. Russell is one of his most interesting
"signature killers" in that Russell's entire existence
followed a course set at an early age when a mother, and then
a stepmother, abandoned him. These women came to represent,
to Russell, Womanhood Total. What they did to him, abandoned
him in life, needed to be repaid through death. While they
were not to be touched, he nevertheless unleashed his vengeance
on others in female form whom he considered – as he considered
his mother and stepmother – heartless and promiscuous.
As Ted Bundy (whom Russell idolized) was able to navigate
unsuspectingly "normal" in his world, so did Russell in
his. A black man in his thirties in an upper-echelon yuppie
community, he brought with him to the singles bars a good-looking
face, a flashing smile, verbosity and a great personality that
camouflaged a lethal under-self. He picked up women, black and
white, with the ease of Lothario, but with the intention of
Bluebeard.
"The fury (George Russell) expended at the crime scenes
(and) the obvious lengths he went to show whomever found his
victims' bodies the contempt he felt for those women...bespeak a
kind of deep-residing cauldron of anger that's way beyond
normality," writes Dr. Keppel.
As is typical with many serial killers, Russell's anger
eventually overtook him.
The following article detailing what has been since called
"The Bellevue Yuppie Murders" is based on the
determinations and hypotheses of Dr. Keppel and the findings of the
Bellevue/Seattle area police who took part in the investigation.
Because no one was present when George Walterfield Russell, Jr.
committed his necrophiliac murders, much remains in conjecture –
what exactly went through the murderer's mind, for instance. In
attempting to re-enact those scenes, as well as digging into the
killer's brain while he stalked his victims, I referred to the
latter scrutiny of the subject painstakingly studied and addressed
by experts.
With this story I also intended – and hopefully succeeded – to
step deeper into the recesses of signature killings, an examination
I had begun with my previous story of Harvey
Glatman, the sexual necrophile who killed then posed his
female victims. Several other Crime Library articles
touch on this subject (see stories on Ted Bundy and Jeffrey
Dahmer) and this profile of Russell aims to take that exploration
a step further.
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