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Short filmTranscript
00:32This is the area and probably the trail that my sister was hiking on.
00:39Over the hill there, you could see San Francisco Golden Gate Bridge.
00:45And she would have come up here to come look at the sunset late in the afternoon.
00:52The next morning, my mother called and told me that Annie's missing.
00:58My sister really took to hiking for her.
01:03The worst thing that's going to happen to you was getting attacked by a bear.
01:08She was not used to predators in her own backyard.
01:15This is the story of a serial killer who hunted his prey, human beings, specifically women, in the most beautiful
01:24places you can imagine.
01:28You never know what or who is hiding just off trail.
01:32To this day, people are still haunted by the trailside killer.
01:36The damage and the trauma done to the victims, the survivors and their families is immeasurable.
01:43It lives on.
01:44My mom survived a serial killer and literally lived to tell the tale.
01:50The trailside killer was baffling the authorities and terrorizing the public.
01:54It was a very traumatizing time for people in Northern California.
01:58You didn't feel safe anywhere now.
02:00He had this insatiable appetite to hurt women.
02:05Would you rather see a bear or a man in the woods?
02:09It's always the bear.
02:10People are so unpredictable, and that's what's scary.
02:15The trailside killer would find people hiking in the woods, and he would stalk them and then murder them.
02:28The shockwaves hadn't even settled when the Bay Area was rocked by the trailside killer again.
02:34She was in the wrong place, wrong time.
02:36He was looking for young females.
02:38His objective was to rape and murder and get away with it.
02:42To him, that was the ultimate crime.
02:45That's his nature, to plot and scheme and kill.
02:50You wanted them to catch that person because you wanted it to stop.
02:54We have on our hands a killer with severe psychological problems.
03:00If he had had the opportunity, he would have tried to kill me.
03:03And the question is, could there be more victims out there?
03:26San Francisco, you have the city and the outdoors right at your doorstep.
03:32The natural landscape of Marin County is rolling hills that roll down into the Pacific Ocean.
03:39One of the dominant features in the area is Mount Temelpais.
03:43And Northern California has the best of everything here.
03:47There's very little crime, so it was very safe.
03:49And when these killings started happening on the trails, killings of women, rapes, and murders, it shattered everything.
03:59Nobody felt safe anymore.
04:03The trailside killer was a man who stalked and murdered women and couples on Northern California hiking trails between 1979
04:11and 1981.
04:13He would be nameless and faceless for years.
04:16This all happened in the early 80s.
04:20We didn't have cell phone technology then.
04:23In these remote areas, there really is not help close by.
04:29I think the wilderness makes a great crime scene, unfortunately, because evidence is lost in it.
04:37These were women who felt that they were going to be out communing with nature, and they ended up communing
04:45with a serial killer.
04:50So the series of murders that would be known as the trailside killings began in August of 1979.
04:57A 44-year-old woman named Etta Cain decided to go hiking on Mount Temelpais.
05:03It marked the first murder in memory on the mountain.
05:06No one could know then that it would be the beginning of a gruesome pattern.
05:10She was shot execution style.
05:13She was nude except for a pair of socks.
05:15She had been shot with a large caliber weapon, a 44 caliber gun.
05:20What investigators believe is that the gun was too noisy.
05:24So he realized that that was a good way to get caught.
05:28So he starts using a knife, and he stabs his next victims.
05:32Seven months after the first murder, the trailside killer struck again.
05:3623-year-old Barbara Schwartz was stabbed to death.
05:39It was a really, really horrific crime scene to come across.
05:44It was where they found his glasses that they were able to link to a prison.
05:48They were looking for an ex-convict, so that was a clue.
05:53Sheriff's deputies only have one clue tonight.
05:55They found a 10-inch knife about half a mile in along the Matt Davis Trail.
05:59Old women and even other single male hikers travel with companions on the mountain.
06:06Barbara Schwartz was not the only victim who was stabbed by the trailside killer, according to police.
06:11Mary Frances Bennett was murdered October 21, 1979.
06:16Investigators would say that she would have been butchered,
06:19and she was dragged into these woods and found there.
06:25Police say the trailside killer changed his method of killing,
06:28so he switches to a gun, and police say his favorite gun ends up being a .38.
06:35The scientist and daughter of a prominent Marin doctor was found shot to death by a high-powered weapon.
06:40On October 13, Ann Alderson met her death in the same way as Etta King, ambushed on a trail.
06:54My sister was Ann, Evelyn Alderson.
06:57She was the victim in the trailside murder saga.
07:04She was 26.
07:06I would say she was beginning the prime of her life.
07:09She had a lot of freedom to say, gee, the world is my oyster.
07:14I'm really excited about what comes next.
07:21My sister Ann was a somewhat quiet person on the outside, but on the inside she was a person of
07:28very strong conviction.
07:30She really believed that the world could be a better place.
07:35She really, really loved being outside in the forest.
07:39She worked as a forest ranger.
07:41This was something that was so far beyond our imaginations at the time.
07:47My sister went off abroad and was working with the Peace Corps,
07:51and so when she came back, she was not updated on that there had been a couple murders in the
07:58area.
07:59Annie had no idea of the trailside killings.
08:02I think what my sister found in nature is she found peace.
08:06She found a place where she could meditate.
08:13Sorry.
08:21On the night she died, by the reports of hikers and so forth in the area,
08:26she was spotted up in the Mount Tamalpais Mountain Theater.
08:30She was just kind of up there watching the sunset and enjoying the evening,
08:35and two people thought that they should warn her about that there was a predator around,
08:42but they saw her kind of in such deep meditation, so they kind of just let her be.
08:49I heard about it the next morning when my mother called and told me that Annie's missing.
08:54We knew something was wrong.
08:58My sister Ann's car was just up the trail from here,
09:04and she was just up the road, and she was in the parking lot.
09:05She was in the parking lot.
09:06This became ground zero for the search for my sister.
09:13Ann Alderson's killing was found to be committed with a .38 caliber weapon.
09:18She had been shot execution style in the back of the head.
09:23There was evidence that she had been raped and then redressed.
09:28What was most frustrating about not knowing who murdered my sister, I think,
09:34was the fact that the worry that other people were going to fall victim to them.
09:39So when it did happen again and again, you're just, your heart broke.
09:45The shock waves hadn't even settled when the Bay Area was rocked by the trailside killer again.
09:49About a month after Ann's murder,
09:52Shawna May and Diane O'Connell went on a hike on the very same day.
09:56Who, by the way, are not friends.
09:58They're just random hikers on the same trail.
10:01Both of them disappeared.
10:05And now there is this massive search that's being done.
10:09And pretty quickly they do find victims, but it's not Diane O'Connell and Shawna May.
10:15While police are searching for Shawna and Diane, they come across the bodies of two more people.
10:21It's a young man and a woman.
10:23They have been missing for weeks.
10:25So Richard and Cynthia were a young couple.
10:27They had plans of getting married and they were just on a camping trip together.
10:33And they were discovered severely decomposing side by side.
10:38They were the first shooting victims that were found to be connected to that 38 caliber weapon.
10:44And then not far from these two bodies, police find their two missing hikers from that day.
10:50Nude and shot to death.
10:52Doesn't that tell you what a psycho he is?
10:54He is like an animal that keeps bringing his prey back to the same little spot.
11:01He is a killer who kills on instinct.
11:04Not one, but four victims this time at Point Reyes National Seashore.
11:09Now, as the bodies are starting to mount up, he's not just going after individuals, he's going after couples.
11:15Are you linking the decontose bodies with the fresh bodies with the mountain and killing all of them together?
11:21We are at this time, yes.
11:22And it was after finding these people that they realized they had a serial killer.
11:34This individual is very capable of striking again.
11:38Previously, we suggested that women should not hike alone.
11:41I am now cautioning even women traveling in pairs.
11:49Always look behind my shoulder every once in a while.
11:51You feel like someone's like watching you.
11:54Yeah.
11:57One of the things I personally love the most about the outdoors is the refuge that it offers from the
12:03busyness of everyday life.
12:05You can go out and explore, find yourself again, tune out everything else.
12:13I actually make it a point to say hello to the person passing me and make eye contact with them.
12:18I want to make sure you know that I see you.
12:21I will carry bear spray with me to use as a self-defense.
12:27Overwhelmingly, I have felt safe in the outdoors, but I have definitely had moments where I have not.
12:42It is quiet and ever so lonely along the hiking trails on Mount Tam.
12:46But no one is out here tonight knowing that the savage marine killer may be lurking along these trails.
12:54So people in Northern California at this time, by November of 1980, were just terrified.
13:02Rangers were actually coming up to hikers, letting them know what had happened, to be aware, let them know if
13:10they saw anything that was suspicious.
13:13There started to be warning signs where they would put out, they would say, don't hike alone.
13:21For the longest time, no one knew what the trail side killer looked like.
13:25The composite made us think that he was a tall-skinned guy with a long nose.
13:31The physical description, medium build, medium length, brown hair.
13:37That's the thing with eyewitness testimony, right, is it's unreliable.
13:41And in this case, unfortunately, it was.
13:44It kind of misdirected the investigation for a really long time.
13:52So the killer now moves to Santa Cruz County.
13:55This is about 70 miles south of Marin County.
14:01I believe that his killing urges were getting stronger and stronger to the point to where he couldn't control it
14:10anymore.
14:12So in March 1981, Ellen Hanson and her boyfriend, Stephen Hartle, had decided to go camping in Henry Cowell State
14:20Park.
14:21Twenty-year-old Ellen Hanson and her friend, Steve Hartle, had left their campsite and they were headed up the
14:27trail for the observation deck.
14:29But they never got that far.
14:33Steve and Ellen are college students at UC Davis and they go for a hike.
14:39They run into this man who becomes kind of aggressive with them.
14:43And so Steve thinks this is a hold up.
14:50The assailant doesn't want his wallet.
14:53He wants his girlfriend and he tells him so.
14:55He says, no, I'm going to rape your girlfriend and you're going to watch.
15:01And he proceeds to shoot them.
15:09It's heartbreaking that Steve saw his girlfriend be killed right in front of him.
15:17The unbelievable thing is that Steve is shot in the throat.
15:24He survives.
15:25And it is in this moment that so much is revealed about the killer.
15:33Steve was not the only eyewitness to this crime and other people were able to give police an ID of
15:39the killer.
15:40A full color composite drawing of the trailside killer suspect is now out.
15:45Law enforcement agencies think this is the most accurate and latest likeness so far.
15:49Based on the second composite, the killer looked like a very average man,
15:54not necessarily like a smooth talking Ted Bundy type.
16:01One of the breaks in the case is when someone thought she recognized him.
16:06I know it's David Carpenter.
16:07I can go by his chin and the horn-rimmed glasses and things.
16:10Did you notify authorities?
16:11Right away.
16:13His name is David Carpenter.
16:15David Carpenter.
16:16David Carpenter.
16:18Now police are being directed toward David Carpenter.
16:23All of a sudden, he's a suspect.
16:28David Carpenter was a really ordinary looking person.
16:32He was in his 50s and he was kind of dumpy and bald.
16:37Nothing about him stood out.
16:39He had horn-rimmed glasses, looked like a respectable, kind of a nerdy guy.
16:45Nothing scary about him.
16:47He also had a very severe stutter.
16:50When he was in that killing zone, he stopped stuttering.
16:53It's like he was either completely in control or completely out of control.
16:59It was pure evil inaction.
17:01David Carpenter was born in 1930 to Francis and Elwood Carpenter.
17:08His father and mother did not get along.
17:10They fought constantly.
17:12He was severely abused by his parents.
17:14By the time he was 17, he was incarcerated and that was crimes against children.
17:19David Carpenter was a serious predator and we know this based on his records.
17:26And nothing ever changed. If anything, he got worse.
17:29He was sent to California Youth Authority, but he only could stay there until he was 18 and then he
17:36was released.
17:40It's 1960 in San Francisco and David Carpenter appears to have his criminal ways behind him.
17:47He's now married, has three children, he's working.
17:49And one of his colleagues, Lois DeAndrade, is someone that he has his eye on.
17:55I think part of the reason why Lois has been such a focus of David Carpenter's case is because of
18:01her daughter, Lisa Rinna, who has brought a lot of light to her story and has kept it alive.
18:08Lisa Rinna is a Hollywood actress.
18:12She is best known for the Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.
18:15Her mother, Lois DeAndrade, was an early victim of David Carpenter.
18:20I think my mom was positive and never played a victim, never felt sorry for herself.
18:29And she could have been the most miserable, fucked up, traumatized human being and I never saw that.
18:37I've seen clips of Lisa Rinna talking about her mother on The Housewives of Beverly Hills before.
18:43He's straddling me and he had a hammer in one hand, a knife in another.
18:47I was the first one that he went to jail for.
18:51And so one morning she was waiting at the bus stop to go to the dentist.
18:55And he came by the bus stop and said, Lois, I want you to meet my new baby.
19:00She was like, no, I have to go to the dentist.
19:02And he's like, I'll drive you.
19:03And she got in the car with him.
19:05He started talking to her and he was not stuttering.
19:10That was the first sign.
19:11He was driving in a weird direction and then she said, David, what's going on with you?
19:18You're, you're not stuttering.
19:20You're speaking clearly.
19:22And he said, I don't know, Lois, something just comes over me.
19:26And that's when she knew she was fucked.
19:29But then he starts driving instead of towards their house through the Presidio, which is an army base here right
19:36at the foot of the Golden Gate Bridge.
19:38Now it's maybe 10 in the morning.
19:41Luckily, a military policeman saw this car drive down a deserted road that no one should be driving on.
19:48So he followed them.
19:51And as David Carpenter parked the car, he literally straddled my mom, grabbed a knife out of the glove box,
19:58takes the knife, goes at my mom.
20:01My mom grabs it with her hand and it severs these two fingers.
20:05So her fingers are like dangling.
20:07And then David starts to freak out because he sees the car coming.
20:11And so he reaches in the back, grabs a hammer and starts smashing my mom over the head with a
20:15hammer.
20:16He starts hammering at her head.
20:19If that police officer had not shown up when he did, Lois would be dead.
20:24The MP shoots David Carpenter in the stomach.
20:28Doesn't kill him.
20:30My mom, she's in the hospital for three months.
20:33She had to have a big metal plate put in her head.
20:36David Carpenter then pleads guilty.
20:40Then he goes on to become the trailside killer.
20:43She had no idea that she was one of the first victims of a serial killer.
20:49And had that police officer not been there, she likely would have been his first murder victim.
20:54My mom lived in fear, for sure.
20:56But she's very lucky that she survived it.
21:00David Carpenter received 14 years in federal prison for the attack on Lois D'Andrade.
21:06He ended up serving nine.
21:08The idea that David Carpenter was let out for good behavior, it seems a little bit ludicrous.
21:14And he was back on the streets of San Francisco in 1969.
21:18It really underscores how much crimes against women are not taken seriously enough.
21:24A year after David Carpenter was released from federal prison, he went on a crime spree over about a week.
21:31According to police, he sexually assaults multiple women, and he serves almost nine years for this.
21:38And some might say, is that really enough?
21:41He was a convicted sex offender, and somehow he wasn't on the list.
21:46Once he got out, he was just a predator.
21:52In the late 70s and early 80s, California had gone through a little bit of a transformation.
21:57The summer of love was long passed over, and we were moving into a new time.
22:02It was, you know, the golden age of serial killers.
22:07I don't know what was going on in California at the time, but there were multiple serial killers all killing
22:13at the same time.
22:14I mean, police had their hands full.
22:16There was the freeway killer, the hillside strangler who got confused with the trailside killer sometimes.
22:24They had gone through the Zodiac killings. That was in the late 60s.
22:28The elusive killer who taunted police with cryptic messages signed Zodiac.
22:32We were dealing with somebody who would later be known as the Golden State Killer.
22:36People have their doors and windows open, but the police are saying lock up tight.
22:41Sacramento's infamous East Area Rapist may still be in town.
22:44So it was a very scary time.
22:50After the attack on Steve and his girlfriend, Ellen, police are hoping the new composite sketch might help catch the
22:57trailside killer before he kills again.
23:00Authorities have their eyes on David Carpenter, but he still continues his killing spree.
23:05This time, David Carpenter chooses a victim within his own orbit.
23:11Heather Skaggs was a young woman who worked with David Carpenter at the printing company where he was employed.
23:19She told her boyfriend that she was going with David Carpenter to look at a car and she never came
23:26back.
23:26She had reservations about it, about going because of the way this guy acted. I don't know why she went.
23:37Shortly after 7 a.m., the silence this neighborhood is accustomed to was broken when Department of Justice agents, the
23:43FBI, and members of the Marin County Task Force converged in a home at 38 Sussex, arresting 51-year-old
23:49David Joseph Carpenter as the suspected trailside killer.
23:53The case of the trailside killer finally reaches a pinnacle. They have arrested a man they suspect of killing seven
24:01people in less than two years.
24:05David Carpenter was arrested May 15, 1981.
24:08There were, I would say, something like 25 different law enforcement agencies. The feds were involved, the FBI, all kinds
24:17of local agencies.
24:18At this point, there is a lot of evidence pointing to David Carpenter. There are the witnesses. There's the composite.
24:26There are the leads that are coming in through the tip line.
24:29There's David Carpenter's history as a convicted sex offender with a long history of violence against women.
24:36And then there is the similarity of the weapon. They were all killed with a .38 caliber pistol.
24:49Soon after David Carpenter's arrest, Heather Skagg's body was found in Big Basin State Park.
24:55The small poster describes her as a missing person. Unfortunately, she now is a murder victim.
25:01It was also determined that she had been killed with a .38 caliber weapon and there was evidence of rape.
25:07The link between the two sets of cases is a firearms link.
25:17All the bullets came from the same gun, which meant the crimes were all committed by the same man, hence
25:22the trailside killer case.
25:24But the question is, where is the murder weapon? That will be the ultimate evidence against him.
25:39I was barely 18 when I met David Carpenter. And at that time, my husband, Shane, was robbing banks and
25:47he was a drug addict.
25:48He would rob banks to keep his habit up.
25:52I did not know anything that Carpenter had done wrong other than he had been in jail with Shane and
25:59I didn't know why.
26:00Shane was interested in getting a gun. And Dave was saying, well, I can get you a gun.
26:05Why do I think he gave the gun to Shane? I think that he planned on setting Shane up to
26:11take the fall for the murders.
26:13My husband Shane and I found out that David Carpenter was a murder when someone started beating on our door.
26:21And it was the police. They said they arrested him this morning for murder.
26:25And, of course, we were completely shocked.
26:28Now, we had that gun right in the middle of our floor. We were messy.
26:33And the police searched our apartment and didn't find it.
26:36We both decided to leave that apartment. Shane took the gun with us.
26:40We basically carried it around for a couple of days.
26:44So Shane buried it in a vacant lot in San Francisco where they had torn a building up.
26:50Shane went on and did another robbery and got arrested.
26:53I said, we have to tell him where that gun is.
26:55And so he did it. He told him where the gun was.
26:58And that resulted in Carpenter being tied to all the murders.
27:03Finally, the terror on the trails is over. The courtroom battle to prove he is the trailside killer has just
27:13begun.
27:13But there's so much more to do. Now come the trials. Can they prove it?
27:23Now that people feel more comfortable to leave their homes and go hiking and running again, prosecutors are working really
27:29hard to build their cases against David Carpenter.
27:33David Carpenter says, oh, I'm innocent and I'm about to fight this. And he does.
27:38There would actually be two trials for the trailside killing case. You had the Santa Cruz County murders and then
27:45the Marin County murders.
27:47Because of how much publicity there was in Northern California, they actually moved the trials.
27:56Carpenter, who claims he is innocent, watched today as 24 jurors filed into the courtroom. Prosecutors are asking for the
28:03death penalty.
28:04This was the costliest trial in California history up to that point.
28:09So the first trial in Los Angeles County was a very solid case because you had the witness, Stephen Hartle,
28:16who took the stand and was able to vividly describe the entire crime from beginning to end and also David
28:23Carpenter.
28:24Would you point him out for all of us?
28:28I said, you know, I'm sitting right there in the brown sweater, in the glasses.
28:35He came closer and I moved closer and he said that he wanted to rape that one.
28:42I heard two shots and didn't feel anything. And then I felt like somebody hit my neck with a sledgehammer.
28:52And he's the one person that says, yes, I saw the guy that shot me. That man is right over
28:58there in the courtroom.
28:59We the jury in the above entitled action find the defendant, David Joseph Carpenter, guilty of the crime of murder.
29:05David Joseph Carpenter shall suffer the death penalty if ever there was a case in which the death penalty was
29:11appropriate. This is that case.
29:14I saw him, you know, I went to the death penalty trial when I was 21. It's very hard to
29:22see someone who has tried to kill your mother.
29:26He had every opportunity to speak, apologize, show remorse. And he didn't. If anything, he doubled down on his claims
29:35of innocence.
29:35David Carpenter still faces trial in five more cases, more rapes and murders, this time on hiking trails in Marin
29:42County.
29:43That trial is held in San Diego.
29:48It lasted for a little over four months. My mother went into the courtroom every day because she wanted the
29:55jury to see that her daughter had a face and that she was somebody who mattered to a family.
30:02I joined my mother in San Diego and I sat across the courtroom from David Carpenter.
30:07In the San Diego trial, David Carpenter would take the stand in his own defense. He thought that he could
30:13persuade a jury that he was not guilty.
30:16When David Carpenter takes the stand, he claims he's innocent. He claims that he has alibis for every murder.
30:23As of the first week in October after I got my Chevy station wagon, I began taking my father's shoving.
30:34To be clear, Mr. Carpenter has never admitted being guilty.
30:40The defense conceded. There was one trailside killer. Our defense just was that it wasn't David Carpenter.
30:46They decided he was guilty of everything and they sentenced him to death on everything.
30:50We, the jury, and the above entitled cause determine that the penalty shall be death.
30:55They did June 27th, 1988.
30:57When the jury came back, justice was served.
31:04David Carpenter, as of date, is still alive. He's 95 years old. He was convicted and sentenced to death.
31:12David Carpenter is moved to San Quentin's death row, also housed at San Quentin.
31:17Charles Manson, Sirhan Sirhan, William Bonin, another serial killer.
31:22But as of last year, he is unable to walk. He's very frail. He's very elderly.
31:28He was moved to a California prison hospital facility where he still resides.
31:34A number of years ago, our governor, Gavin Newsom, declared a moratorium on all executions.
31:40But he's about to have his term expire. The next governor can change that.
31:46To this day, David Carpenter claims his innocence. David Carpenter was interviewed by KTVU Fox 2.
31:52What you're talking about is something that was in the report that's 25.
31:56You know, something that I did 25 years.
32:02And that doesn't describe you now?
32:04No. Stephen Hardell thinks that I'm the trail site killer.
32:09But the thing is this. The most imperfect evidence that there is, is eyewitness testimony.
32:15I think the only thing that I would request of David Carpenter is that, give closure.
32:21If there are other victims out there, it's time. Take accountability.
32:25Most investigators believe that there are still victims of David Carpenter
32:30that haven't been identified or conclusively tied to him. There are several.
32:35It took three decades to link Mary Frances Bennett's death to David Carpenter.
32:41DNA evidence would conclusively link him to that murder as well.
32:46Which makes you think, could there be other victims out there?
32:51I honestly don't have anything I would say to David Carpenter.
32:56I don't wish him pain in his situation, but I certainly don't wish him well either.
33:01I don't know if I could look him in the eye, and I don't know if I could speak to
33:04him, to be honest with you.
33:07Fuck off, you shitty old man. I hope you rot. I hope it's been miserable.
33:16After my sister was killed, my family and I and others felt that it was important to get back out
33:25on the trails and reclaim the mountain.
33:29He had stolen my sister and my life with her from me, and I wasn't going to let him steal
33:35anything else from my life.
33:39Right now we're headed up to a set of picnic benches that are by the parking lot.
33:46I've been told, I've not seen it, but there's a plaque in memory of all the women that were victims
33:52of the trailside killer.
33:55And so I thought I'd come up here and have a look for it.
34:00The plaque here reads, Forever on the Mountain, and then it names the three women that died in this area.
34:10And Alderson, age 26, from Terralinda, Love is never ending.
34:15I think that's a really nice thing.
34:20I'm very proud, proud that people would remember her.
34:28And it's a lovely setting.
34:31And people always will remember and enjoy this spot.
35:15I'm very proud, proud that people would remember and enjoy this spot.
35:45I'm very proud, proud that people would remember and enjoy this spot.
35:47Okay.
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