Joseph Kondro

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Joseph Kondro
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Joseph Kondro
Born
Joseph Robert Kondro

1960 (1960)
Michigan, U.S.
DiedMay 3, 2012(2012-05-03) (aged 51–52)
Other namesThe Longview Serial Killer
Conviction(s)Forgery
Sexual assault
Murder
Drug dealing
Theft
Criminal penalty55 years in prison
Details
Victims2 convictions, many more strongly suspected
CountryUS
State(s)Washington
Date apprehended
1997 (charged in prison for abduction, rape and murder of Kara Rudd while already jailed on previous charges)

Joseph Robert Kondro (1960 – May 3, 2012), known as The Longview Serial Killer, was an American serial killer implicated in the kidnapping, sexual assault and murder of three children in or near Longview, Washington – 8-year-old Rima Traxler, 12-year-old Kara Rudd and 8-year-old Chila Silvernails – in the 1980s and 1990s. Kondro confessed to the first two murders and was strongly suspected in the third, and possibly linked to the disappearances of many other young girls in the region, before his death in prison by natural causes in 2012.

Early life, psychopathic tendencies and criminal history[]

Joseph Kondro was born to a Chippewa mother with six other children in Michigan, being handed over for adoption at birth and growing up with his adoptive family in Castle Rock, Washington. He attended a Catholic parochial school.

As he would later admit to police, Kondro showed disturbing psychopathic tendencies from an early age, including engaging in frequent fights with other children, killing animals (including neighborhood pets), wielding a knife, and drinking alcohol as early as age 7. Kondro would subsequently elaborate on these early signs of psychopathy by explaining in detail his lack of empathy and violent desires, comparing himself to an alligator lying in wait, coming up occasionally to feed. He also admitted to molesting young girls while still a child himself, developing fantasies about murder as he grew, and began amassing a lengthy criminal record including auto and petty theft, drunk driving, domestic abuse, drug dealing and forgery.

Kondro had several children but was unable to care for them, in significant part due to drug addiction and his recurring troubles with the law.[1][2][3]

Disappearances of Chila Silvernails and Rima Traxler[]

Rima Danette Traxler
Chila M Silvernails

In the early 1980s, authorities were baffled by the unexplained disappearances of several young girls in southwestern Washington. Among these was Chila Silvernails of Kalama, who vanished in 1982 on her way to catching a school bus. Her nude body was found the day after her disappearance; she had been raped and strangled. Kondro had dated Silvernails’ mother, but he was not initially suspected in the crime.

On May 15, 1985, Rima Traxler, a third-grader at St. Helens Elementary School in Longview, went missing. She had been a well-behaved and academically successful child with little in the way of conflicts or behavioral issues, so the community suspected that she had become a kidnap victim rather than a runaway. However, there was little trace of exactly when or how she had disappeared. Kondro had been friends with Rima's parents and was apparently drinking beer with Traxler's stepfather on the day she vanished. He was questioned by police, but not named as a person of interest in the case.[1][2][4]

Abduction and murder of Kara Rudd, arrest and prosecution[]

Kara Patricia Rudd

On November 21, 1996, 12-year-old Kara Rudd vanished after entering a car on the grounds of her middle school in to Monticello. As with the Traxler case, Rudd had been a popular girl with no behavioral issues and was not suspected as a runaway. Again there was a connection to Joseph Kondro, but this time the suspicions were more concrete. Kondro had been a childhood friend of Kara's mother, was known to the victim herself, and had frequently stayed in the family's garage before being evicted due to his chronic drinking issues.

Kondro was seen with lacerations on his skin that he could not explain shortly after Rudd's disappearance, suggestive of scratches from a girl's long nails acquired in a struggle. Most strikingly, Rudd had told a classmate of her plan to skip school on the day of her disappearance and was seen entering Kondro's vehicle, a Pontiac Firebird, making him the last person to be seen with her prior to her disappearance. Authorities still lacked sufficient evidence to make an arrest, but after a fruitless six week search, local detective Scott McDaniel decided to inspect the Mount Solo area near the Columbia River, which Kondro was known to frequent. There, police found Rudd's body inside an abandoned Volkswagen; she had been raped and strangled. The car allowed the preservation of critical forensic evidence, and DNA samples from the crime scene matched Kondro, who was arrested for Rudd's murder.[3][1][2][5] Under interrogation, Kondro admitted that he had taken Rudd to a swimming hole in Germany Creek, and then to an abandoned house near the Columbia River, where he raped and strangled her.

To avoid the death penalty, Kondro and his attorneys struck a deal with prosecutors, in which he confessed to the murder of Traxler more than a decade before. Kondro explained that he was already known and liked by the Traxler family, and he was able to trick the girl into entering his vehicle by mentioning the word "unicorn", a safety password taught to her by her parents, and which he had learned from her stepfather. He raped, bludgeoned and strangled Traxler at Germany Creek, burying her beside a tree. By the terms of the plea deal, he was sentenced to 55 years in prison at the Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla. Because of his violent tendencies and criminal record, authorities strongly suspected he had been involved in the unexplained disappearances of other preteen girls throughout the region besides Traxler and Rudd. They were especially convinced of Kondro's role in Silvernails' disappearance in 1982, given the striking similarities in modus operandi between her case and those of the other girls, the location of the crime, and the fact that Kondro had dated Silvernails’ mother. Detectives planned to question him further about the other unsolved disappearances, but he balked at discussing them due to concerns about a capital punishment imposition. Kondro died in prison of liver disease likely related to Hepatitis C infection.[1][3][4]

Media and criminal profiling[]

Kondro's cases, his victims and the circumstances surrounding his actions have all drawn considerable attention across print, Internet and broadcast media, not only due to the heinous nature but also to the possible factors and implications in the development of psychopathy, and the potential for psychological profilers to identify warning signs and traits of serial killers and violent criminals. Such criminal profiles can be used to identify criminals at high risk of becoming violent offenders, expediting both steps to monitor and alter the violent behavior (including in youth detention centers for juvenile offenders) as well as protect potential victims.

Kondro exhibited many of the classical traits of psychopathy from a young age, including a short temper and ease to anger, poor impulse control, frequent fighting with other kids, physical roughness, wanton killing of animals and early substance abuse, admitting to drinking before the age of 10. However, he later also showed many of the baffling and seeming contradictory qualities of criminals with antisocial personality disorder, and despite some differences in physical appearance, public persona and the M.O. of his crimes, he had many such traits in common with serial killer Ted Bundy. Like Bundy, despite his personal instability and tendency to crime and violence, Kondro was able to come off as quite charming and personable. This allowed him to win the trust of those around him, which he used in the commission of his crimes, often perpetrated against the young daughters of his friends. Kondro was also aware on some level that his actions were immoral and monstrous, even apparently able to empathize with families’ desires for justice, yet he said he could not stop himself and compared his drive to violent crime as an adrenaline rush.

Kondro was profiled by John E. Douglas of the FBI Behavioral Science Unit (BSU), one of the founders of criminal profiling, on the MSNBC documentary (and subsequent Netflix series) Mindhunter. Douglas also discussed his profiling of Kondro in-depth in his book (co-authored with Mark Olshaker), The Killer Across the Table. The detective work and investigations into the abductions of Traxler and Rudd, and possibilities of Kondro's involvement with other disappearances in the Longview region, were featured in several true crime articles and books, including The Longview Serial Killer by author Lori Carangelo, and a number of television documentaries, including On the Case with Paula Zahn (episode "Broken Trust") and Cold Case Files ("Unicorns and Alligators").[2][3][4][5]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d Fischer, Amy M.E. (March 11, 2013). "California author examines life of Joseph Kondro". The Daily News.
  2. ^ a b c d Fischer, Amy M.E. (March 19, 2006). "Most Notorious: Joseph Kondro was a smooth-talking killer". The Daily News.
  3. ^ a b c d Olsen, Lise (August 6, 2001). "'Sociopath' amazed he's not on death row". Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
  4. ^ a b c Kamb, Lewis (February 21, 2003). "Part 6 – In their own words: The twisted art of murder". Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
  5. ^ a b Stasi, Linda (November 29, 2008). "Head detective". New York Post.

External links[]

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