Leonard Lake

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Leonard Lake

Mugshot of Lake
Background information
Born: October 29, 1945 or July 20, 1946[1]
San Francisco, California
Died: June 6, 1985
Cause of death: suicide by cyanide pill
Killings
Number of victims: 12-25
Span of killings:  ? through 1985
Country: U.S.
State(s): California

Leonard Lake (October 29, 1945[2] or July 20, 1946[3]June 6, 1985) was an American serial killer. The crimes he committed together with Charles Ng came to light when Lake committed suicide by taking a cyanide pill shortly after being arrested for a firearms offense.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Lake was born in San Francisco in 1945. He was a bright child, but had an obsession with pornography that stemmed from taking nude photos of his sisters, apparently with the encouragement of his mother.[3] It was also alleged that Lake extorted sexual favors from his sisters in return for protecting them from their younger delinquent brother, Donald.

When he was twenty, Lake joined the U.S. Marines and served in the Vietnam War as a radar operator. Diagnosed as mentally ill, Lake was eventually given a medical discharge and underwent psychiatric treatment. Back in civilian life he got married, but his wife divorced him when she found that he was making (and starring in) amateur pornographic movies involving bondage.

In 1980, Lake was given a year's probation for theft. He married again, his new wife soon left him after she got tired of her husband's increasingly erratic behavior and his insistence that she star in pornographic films. Lake was arrested in 1982 for a firearms violation, but he skipped bail and settled into a remote ranch in Wilseyville, Calaveras County. He was eventually joined by Charles Ng, a young Hong Kong-born man whom Lake had met a few years earlier.

[edit] Discovery

On June 2, 1985, an Asian American man later identified as Charles Ng was seen shoplifting in South San Francisco. He fled by the time police arrived, but Leonard Lake, who was with him, was arrested when his car was searched and found to contain a pistol that was illegally equipped with a silencer.

He gave his name as Robin Stapley and had a driver's license in that name. However, the police were suspicious because, according to the driver's license, Robin Stapley was 26, while the man they had in custody was clearly in his late thirties. While being interviewed at the police station, Lake asked for a glass of water and used it to swallow a cyanide pill that he had secretly stashed in the lapel of his shirt. He collapsed and was rushed to a hospital. Lake went into a coma, and survived on life support machines for four days before being pronounced dead.[4]

By then, police had finally confirmed the true identity of their suspect as Leonard Lake. Furthermore, the man whose identity Lake had taken, Robin Stapley, had been missing for several weeks. Lake's car was found to belong to Paul Cosner, 39, who had gone missing eight months previously in November 1984.

The police searched Lake's ranch in Wilseyville. It was clear Lake was a survivalist, his ranch fitted with a bunker and a stash of weapons. In a diary, Lake had written how he was convinced there was going to be a global nuclear war, and he planned on surviving in his bunker and rebuilding the human race with a collection of female slaves (he named this plan "Operation Miranda" after a character in the book The Collector by John Fowles). The police also found videos showing Lake and Ng torturing and raping women.

The grounds of the ranch were dug up and twelve corpses were uncovered in shallow graves. Amongst these victims were two entire families; Harvey Dubs and his wife Deborah and baby son Sean, and Lonnie Bond and Brenda O'Conner and their baby son, Lonnie Bond Jr. The women had been abused, and killed after their husbands and infants were disposed of. Five of the bodies were of men lured to the ranch to be robbed and killed — including Robin Stapley and Paul Cosner — and the twelfth was identified as 18-year-old Kathleen Allen, who knew Ng because her boyfriend had once been his cellmate in prison. Police also found many charred fragments of human bones, but they were unable to determine the identity of the victims they had come from or how many there had been.

Lake's younger brother Donald had vanished in 1983 and was presumed dead, as had Charles Gunnar, a friend of Lake's from his military days, whose remains were discovered under the ranch in September 1992.

The authorities concluded that Lake and Ng had murdered as many as twenty five people.[5]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Some sources, such as Michael Newton's The Encyclopedia of Serial Killers and H. Thomas Milhorn's Crime: Computer Viruses to Twin Towers place Lake's birthdate as July 20, 1946. Other sources like the Encyclopedia of Murder & Violent Crime by Eric W. Hickey and Die for Me: The Terrifying True Story of the Charles Ng & Leonard Lake by Don Lasseter, the only book based solely on Lake and Ng's criminal activities, say that Lake was born on October 29, 1945.
  2. ^ Lasseter, Don (2000). Die for Me: The Terrifying True Story of the Charles Ng & Leonard Lake. New York, New York: Pinnacle Books, p20. ISBN 0-7860-1107-6. 
  3. ^ a b Newton, Michael (1999). The Encyclopedia of Serial Killers. New York, New York: Checkmark Books, p134. ISBN 0-8160-3978-X. 
  4. ^ Newton, p135.
  5. ^ Newton, p136.

[edit] External links

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