The Freeway Killers
William Bonin, Vernon Butts, Greg Miley and James
Munro
The Killers Overview
William Bonin
Ringleader

This Downey, California, truck driver became known as the "The Freeway Killer" for his rape and murder spree during the late seventies. A sadistic, Vietnam vet, Billy boy liked to pick up male, teenage hitchhikers to rape and strangle along the freeways of Southern California. Like most serial killers, Bonin was the product of an abusive childhood in the hands of his alcoholic father and was thought to have been repeatedly sexually assaulted by his maternal grandfather. He also had brain damage in areas thought to restrain violent impulses and was manic-depressive.
After spending most of the seventies behind bars for sex attacks on young men,
Willie was paroled in 1978. He moved back to Southern California where he got a
job as a trucker for Dependable Driveaway in Montebello. A year later, his
sexual lust turned deadly. Although he used various methods to kill, he enjoyed
most strangling his prey with their own T-shirts and a tire iron. William, not
being particularly bright, boasted of his killings and kept his collection of
newspaper clippings in his glove compartment. Billy boy liked killing so much,
he brought along his buddies to share the fun. Vernon Butts, an accomplice in at
least five killings, chose to hang himself after being arrested.
Although only convicted of 14 murders, Billy confessed to killing 21 young men.
1982 he was sentenced to death for 10 murders in Los Angeles. A year later he
was sentenced to death again for 4 additional murders in Orange County. On
February 23, 1996, sixteen years after his deadly rampage, William became the
first man executed by lethal injection in California. While awaiting death in
San Quentin, Bonin enjoyed playing bridge with fellow serial killers, Doug
Clark, Lawrence Bittaker and Randy Kraft who combined have killed at least 49
people.
Billy's last meal consisted of two pepperoni and sausage pizzas, three coffee
ice-creams and fifteen cans of coke. The 49-year-old killer ate in silence while
watching "Jeopardy" on TV before meeting with the prison chaplain. At 12:00 AM
he took 13 steps into the death chamber where at 12:08 he was injected with
sodium pentothal, pancuronium bromide and potassium chloride. By 12:13 he was
declared dead. Sadly for the victims' families, Bonin never did repent for his
murderous frenzy.
Posthumously, it was discovered that Billy had received illegally nearly $80,000
in Social Security disability benefits while in Death Row. He started receiving
benefit payments for a mental disability in 1972. The payments should have ended
in 1982 when he went to prison, but they continued. The money kept flowing until
after his execution when the funeral director sent paperwork notifying the
Social Security Administration of Bonin's death. As of March 1996, his family
agreed to repay the money to the state.
James Munro
Accomplice

Munro came to California in 1979. He was a drifter and traveled
from one place to another. The only items that Munro had in his possession were
the clothes on his back. He had no money to provide shelter and ultimately took
to sleeping on the streets of Hollywood, a suburb northwest of Los Angeles,
California.
Munro did not meet Bonin until early May of 1980, when Bonin picked up Munro in
Hollywood, CA. Bonin's potential victims were young males between the ages of 18
to 35 years of age. His victims were usually drifters, the homeless, and young
men who seemed not to bright. Bonin would pursue the weak - in which Bonin could
feel superior over his victims.
Munro's education years were mainly spent in schools whose pupils were
considered handicapped or mentally retarded. Munro, from the time he was 5 years
old(pre-school age) to the time he was 17 years old was in special education
schools for the disabled located in Port Huron, Michigan.
Munro's employment was on and off due to his learning disabilities, which
hindered his progress in moving ahead in society and the employment world. Which
was no fault of Munro.

Munro, for the past 18 years, has repeatedly tried to appeal his conviction, but
came to no prevail. He has written numerous law firms proclaiming his innocence.
To this day, no law firm has responded to taking the case on, or been willing to
investigate into Munro's innocence - which Munro still proclaims.
From day one, the State of California wanted the killer or killers who allegedly
committed these terrible crimes. The state did everything it could to obtain a
conviction against Bonin - even if it meant convicting an innocent man as an
accomplice. The so-called accomplice was himself threatened by Bonin if he (Munro)
did not partake in disposing of the body of Steven James Wells.
At the Municipal Court level Munro plead not guilty to the charge of murder in
the first degree.
Munro was represented by Defense Attorney Mrs. Madelynn Gail Kopple of Santa
Monica, California. She was forced off the case by Superior Court Judge Everett
Ricks, Department 120 of the Los Angeles County Superior Court, Los Angeles,
California.
After the removal of Mrs. Kopple, the trial court appointed Mr. James Goldstein,
Attorney at Law, out of Van Nuys, California.
In or about the month of April 1981, Munro's new defense attorney (James
Goldstein) came to the Los Angeles County Jail and threatened Munro by stating:
"You will go into court tomorrow and plead guilty, or else you are a dead man."
Munro pleaded with the trial court on several occasions about a conflict of
interest between his Defense Attorney (James Allen Goldstein) and himself, due to
threats that Munro had received from Goldstein. The trial court denied Munro's
request for new counsel and a trial by jury.
Judge Ricks had also threatened Munro with death during the Superior Court
proceedings, after Munro was bound over from Municipal Court. This statement of
a death threat is on record.
The present judge of Department 120, Judge Green, of the Los Angeles Superior
Court, in and for the County of Los Angeles, agrees with Judge Rick's opinion
and the death threats. To this day, the Honorable Judge Green has denied Munro's
numerous requests for his transcripts and also for a trial that Munro states he
never received. Today, Munro states: "I want my day in court."
Munro's decision to ask the Governor of California, Gray Davis, for parole is
because of his strong feelings of remorse about what happened to the Wells son.
Munro asks that he be forgiven by the Wells because he was acting out of fear
when Bonin made him assist in the disposal of their son's body, and the fact
that Bonin was going to kill him if he didn't assist in the disposal of the
Wells son.
Munro has a BPT(Board of Prison Terms) hearing every two years, and the Wells
keep coming up and protesting that Munro killed their boy, when Bonin was the
one that murdered Steven Wells - states Munro. For that reason only, and the
emotional outcry from the Wells, the BPT has no choice but to deny Munro his
parole.

See James Munro Art
See James Munro's Probation Report
Read An Interview With James
Read Writings By James Munro
In The Eyes of a Killer
Bonin - The Untold Story
City In Fear
Miley - The Untold Story
Munro - The Childhood Years
Vernon Butts
Accomplice

Gregory M. Miley
Accomplice

The Murders
Between December 1972 and June 1980, authorities in seven
Southern California counties recorded the violent deaths of at least 44 young
men and boys, attributing their murders to an unknown "Freeway Killer." Of
eleven victims slaughtered prior to 1976, most were known or suspected
homosexuals, their deaths lending credence to the notion that the murderer
himself was gay. While strangulation was the favored mode of death, some victims
had been stabbed with knives or ice picks, and their bodies bore the earmarks of
sadistic torture. Homicide investigators noted different hands at work in
several of the murders, but they finally agreed that 21 were almost certainly
connected. (Sixteen others would be solved in 1983, with the arrest of
"Scorecard Killer" Randy Kraft.)
The first "definite" victim was 14-year-old Thomas Lundgren, abducted from
Reseda on May 28, 1979, and discarded the same day, near Malibu. Mark Shelton,
17, was next, reported missing from Westminster on August 4, his body recovered
a week later at Cajon Pass. The day after Shelton's disappearance, 17-year-old
Marcus Grabs was kidnapped in Newport Beach, his violated corpse discovered at
Agoura on August 6. Donald Hyden, 15, was also found in Agoura, on August 27 --
the same day he disappeared from Hollywood. On September 7, 17-year-old David
Murillo vanished from La Mirada, his body found in Ventura five days later. The
remains of Robert Wirostek were found off Interstate 10, between Banning and
Palm Springs, on September 27, but eleven months would pass before he was
identified. Another "John Doe" was discovered in Kern County, on November 30,
with 18-year-old Frank Fox murdered at Long Beach two days later. The killer's
last victim for 1979 was another unidentified male, aged 15 to 20, his violated
body found on December 13. The new year began badly in Southern California, with
16-year-old Michael McDonald abducted from Ontario on January 1, 1980, found
dead two days later in San Bernadino County. Charles Miranda, 14, disappeared
from Los Angeles on February 3, his body discarded in Hollywood later that day.
On February 5, 12-year-old James McCabe was kidnapped in Huntington Beach, his
body recovered three days later in Garden Grove. Ronald Gatlin, 18, disappeared
from Van Nuys on March 14, found dead the next day in Duarte. Fifteen-year-old
Russell Pugh was reported missing from Huntington Beach March 21, his body found
next day at the Lower San Juan Campground, along with the corpse of 14-year-old
victim Glen Barker. Three days later, police found 15-year-old Harry Turner
slain in Los Angeles proper.
The killer claimed two victims on April 10, 1980, abducting 16-year-old Steven
Wood from Bellflower, rebounding to snatch 18-year-old Lawrence Sharp from Long
Beach hours later. Wood's body was found April 11, at Long Beach, but Sharp
remained missing until May 18, when his remains were discovered in Westminster.
Meanwhile, on April 29, 19-year-old Daren Kendrick was reported missing in
Stanton, his body recovered from Carson on May 10, with traces of chloral
hydrate ("knockout drops") in his system. On May 19, 14-year-old Sean King
vanished without a trace in South Gate; he remains among the missing.
Eighteen-year-old Stephen Wells, the last to die, was kidnapped in Los Angeles
June 2, his body discovered the next day at Huntington Beach.
Police got their break on June 10, when 18-year-old William Ray Pugh confessed
"inside" knowledge of the murder series. Pugh identified the killer as William
George Bonin, a 32-year-old Vietnam veteran and truck driver residing in Downey.
A glance at the record revealed Bonin's 1969 conviction, in Torrance, on counts
of kidnapping, sodomy, child molestation and forcible oral copulation. The
charges stemmed from four separate attacks, between November 1968 and January
1969, with Bonin diagnosed as a mentally disordered sex offender, committed to
Atascadero State Hospital. He was released in May 1974, on the recommendation of
psychiatrists who found him "no longer dangerous." Two years later, he was back
in prison, convicted of kidnapping and raping a 14-year-old boy. Bonin had been
paroled in October 1978, seven months before the death of Thomas Lundgren.
Officers established round-the-clock surveillance on Bonin, striking paydirt
after 24 hours. On the night of June 11, 1980, their suspect was arrested while
sodomizing a young man in his van, booked on suspicion of murder and various sex
charges. Held in lieu of $250,000 bond, Bonin was still in jail when police
picked up 22-year-old Vernon Butts on July 25, charging him as an accomplice in
six of the "freeway" murders. Between July 26 and 29, Bonin was formally charged
with 14 counts of murder, eleven counts of robbery, plus one count each of
sodomy and mayhem. Butts, facing six counts of murder and three counts of
robbery, quickly began "singing" to police, naming more alleged accomplices in
the murder ring. James Michael Munro, 19, was arrested in Michigan on July 31,
returned to California for trial on charges of killing Stephen Wells. Three
weeks later, on August 22, 19-year-old Gregory M. Miley was arrested in Texas,
waiving extradition on charges of murdering Charles Miranda and James McCabe,
plus two counts of robbery and one count of sodomy. Orange County raised the
ante on October 29, 1980, charging Vernon Butts with the murders of Mark
Shelton, Robert Wirostek, and Darin Kendrick, plus 17 other felony counts
including conspiracy, kidnapping, robbery, sodomy, oral copulation and sex
perversion. Greg Miley was also charged with another Orange County murder, plus
seven related felony counts. By December 8, suspect Eric Marten Wijnaendts -- a
20-year-old Dutch immigrant -- had been added to the roster, charged with
complicity in the murder of Harry Turner.
Under California law, a murder committed under "special circumstances" --
accompanied by robbery, torture, or rape -- may be punished by death. In
December, Bonin's playmates began cracking, pleading guilty on various felony
charges and drawing life sentences in return for their promise of testimony
against Bonin. They spelled out details of the torture suffered by assorted
"freeway" victims, and the glee with which Bonin inflicted pain. As one
remarked, "Bill said he loved those sounds of screams." On January 11, after
telling police of Bonin's "hypnotic" control, Vernon Butts hanged himself in his
cell, finally successful in the fifth suicide attempt since his arrest. With the
new testimony in hand, Orange County indicted Bonin on eight more counts of
murder, with 25 related counts of robbery and sexual assault. William Bonin's
trial on twelve counts of murder opened November 4, 1981, in Los Angeles. Greg
Miley and James Munro testified for the prosecution, describing how Bonin --
following his arrest -- had urged them to "start going around grabbing anyone
off the street and killing them," in a bid to convince authorities that the
"Freeway Killer" was still at large. A television reporter divulged contents of
a jailhouse interview, in which Bonin admitted participation in 21 murders. "I
couldn't stop killing," the trucker had said. "It got easier with each one we
did." On January 5, 1982, after eight days of deliberation, jurors convicted
Bonin on ten counts of murder and ten of robbery. (He was acquitted in the
deaths of Thomas Lundgren and Sean King.) Two weeks later, he was formally
sentenced to death.

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