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Post by LadyBlue on Feb 26, 2005 2:00:26 GMT -5
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Post by LadyBlue on Feb 26, 2005 2:07:07 GMT -5
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Post by LadyBlue on Feb 26, 2005 2:18:24 GMT -5
[glow=red,2,300]High School Year Book[/glow] --Current Code Enforcement for Park City (housing violations, dog catcher) --Former Boy Scout Leader --President of a local Lutheran Church --Married w 2 Children (Names begin w B & K) He worked for Coleman in the early 1970s -- as did two of BTK's early victims. tinyurl.com/6hwl7AGE 59 WSU 1974-1979 GRADUATED WITH DEGREE IN CRIMINOLOGY A preliminary test matched the person in custody's genetic makeup to the DNA left by the BTK killer at some of the crime scenes, sources said. At the scene of a 1974 crime, sperm was found on and around the body of an 11-year-old girl. More detailed genetic tests are ongoing. His birthdate is March 09, 1945. He drove a minivan and also a truck for work. When he was the Zoning Officer for Park City he drove the minivan mostly. When he was acting as the dog warden or dog officer he drove a pick up truck. He banked at "Sunflower Bank." at 5546 N. Meridian, Wichita, Ks. His parents are Dorthea M and William Rader at 4815 N. Seneca in Wichita, Ks.
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Post by LadyBlue on Feb 26, 2005 3:17:50 GMT -5
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Post by LadyBlue on Feb 26, 2005 10:33:31 GMT -5
These are photos that I captured yesterday from KAKE Skytracker as the investigation was taking place
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Post by LadyBlue on Feb 26, 2005 11:15:20 GMT -5
IT'S OFFICAL BTK IS ARRESTED!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THANK YOU JESUS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Post by LadyBlue on Feb 26, 2005 15:57:45 GMT -5
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Post by LadyBlue on Feb 27, 2005 23:53:26 GMT -5
Rader worked in the meat department for Leeker's IGA in Park City, and was an assembler at Coleman Co. from 1970 to 1973.
When he worked for ADT, he held several positions that allowed him into customers' homes, including installation manager.
"He would've been in a prime position to get very intimate knowledge about them," said Tavares, who worked with Rader for 2 1/2 years.
Officials with ADT could not be reached for comment.
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Post by LadyBlue on Feb 27, 2005 23:55:05 GMT -5
Charlie Otero found it intriguing that his father and the suspect both served in the Air Force in the mid- to late 1960s and that his mother and the suspect both worked for Coleman Co. around 1973.
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Post by LadyBlue on Feb 28, 2005 0:01:08 GMT -5
[glow=red,2,300]1990 Census Worker--Dennis Rader [/glow] During the next six weeks, some Wichitans will receive a visit from a U.S. census worker
The real census doesn't begin until next year -- April 1, 1990, has been designated as Census Day -- but federal workers will be out verifying addresses beginning next week.
They are gathering information in areas that have had considerable growth or change since the 1980 census.
Dennis Rader, census field operations supervisor for the Wichita area, said the address checks are made so that census questionnaires to be mailed out next March can go to correct addresses.
"We find that living units have been built above businesses or residential garages, or that homes have been demolished to make way for new buildings, and we need those addresses," Rader said.
Census workers can be identified by their red, white and blue identification badges and 11- by 16-inch tan address registers.
Arturo Robles, a community awareness specialist with the Bureau of Census, said accurate census information is necessary because the data is used for the apportionment of the nation's 435 congressional seats and distribution of federal money to state and local governments.
Because so much legislation and attention is being focused on the elderly, the handicapped and the homeless, particular attention will be given to those population groups, Robles said.
Robles helps run the agency's Census Awareness and Products program that will alert potential users of information that census takers will gather next year.
Rader also said the census bureau is accepting employment applications for many of the 700 jobs available in Kansas. The people who do much of the door-to-door work, called enumerators, will be employed for six to 12 weeks next spring and will be paid $5.50 an hour. They must be at least 18 years old, a U.S. citizen and take a written test.
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Post by miamom on Feb 28, 2005 1:37:46 GMT -5
This is sooooooooooo wierd. I had thot about a Census connection but never said anything. I guess I got "gunshy" after having to deal with Scott. Always being critisized for my ideas.
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Post by LadyBlue on Feb 28, 2005 12:11:43 GMT -5
Oh I know, I finally just never posted anywhere in a thread where Scott was, because we never saw eye to eye. But can you even believe this guy had all kinds of access to homes, just about in every way that he could have.
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Post by LadyBlue on Feb 28, 2005 13:23:27 GMT -5
Since I would personally like to know, if he could have met Joe Otero in Viet Nam, I'm going to look and see if I can find anything that would tell me. Here is when he served and how many brothers Dennis has
Rader was born March 9, 1945, one of four brothers. He graduated from Heights High School in Wichita in 1963 and from Wichita State University in 1979.
Except for a four-year tour of duty in the Air Force from 1965 to 1969, he spent his entire life in the Wichita area, and has lived in the suburb of Park City since 1971.
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Post by LadyBlue on Feb 28, 2005 13:57:03 GMT -5
On his reunion questionnaire, Rader wrote that he attended Kansas Wesleyan and Butler County Community College before WSU. He also recalled his four years in the Air Force, including tours in Korea, Turkey, Greece and Okinawa.
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Post by LadyBlue on Feb 28, 2005 14:03:22 GMT -5
[glow=red,2,300]Charlie Otero's Words From Cathryn Crier Interview[/glow]
OTERO: Yes, he had recently retired from the United States Air Force where he had been an air commando and an instructor for the Inter-American Air Force Academy.
OTERO: Well, as far as officially, um what I know about my father’s uh activities in the Air Force, um is not very much, but… prior to the murders I had overheard a conversation my father had made on the phone one night and he had asked me to leave my room so that he could use my room for a private call which was totally uncharacteristic of him and being the nosy little kid that I was at the time I put my ear to the door and heard a conversation that pretty much shocked me, scared me back to where I had been sent.
OTERO: I heard. I heard my father tell the other person on the .. on the other end of the line that he needed to tell somebody what he had been doing for the last several years and that he had worked for a certain organization that I am not uh uh allowed to talk about right now. They know who they are. They’ve denied it all these years but they know who they are and they know who he worked for.
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Post by LadyBlue on Feb 28, 2005 23:33:46 GMT -5
[glow=red,2,300]Rader ADT Security[/glow]
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Post by LadyBlue on Mar 2, 2005 12:31:47 GMT -5
[glow=red,2,300]BTK Symbol[/glow]
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Post by LadyBlue on Mar 2, 2005 12:58:45 GMT -5
[glow=red,2,300]BTK's Family[/glow] Father- William E. Rader (deceased, 1996) Mother- Dorothea M. Rader Brothers- Paul (1947), Bill Rader (1949), Jeff (1955),
Obituary (Wichita Eagle on Dec. 29, 1996)
William E. "Bill" Rader,74, retired KG&E Ripley Generating Station plant operator; died Friday, Dec. 27,
1996. Survivors: wife, Dorothea: sons, Dennis, Jeff, both of Wichita, Paul of Falun, Bill of Climax; brothers, Ted of Wichita, Don of Grove, OK, Wallace of Mitchell, IN; eight grandchildren.
1948-1963 William E. Rader, held various positions for KG&E Fireman, lineman, etc.
1960 Dorothea M. Rader, bookeeper, Leekers IGA
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