Beloved elementary school teacher Cherilyn Hawkley was found strangled in a ghoulish Halloween murder on October 31, 1993. Her shocked family, friends and young students are heartbroken.
truecrimedaily.com
"But now, after all this time, cold-case cops believe they may be close to finally catching the Halloween monster who killed Cherilyn Hawkley.
On October 29, 1993, in Granite Bay, a quiet bedroom community of Sacramento, it's the most fun party day of the year at Eureka Elementary, and the popular Miss Hawkley is enjoying the Halloween festivities with her class of fifth-graders.
Hawkley's life is suddenly about to be cut tragically short at age 39.
"She's last seen at the school about 4:30 or so, nothing out of the ordinary, some students and teachers see her, that's about it," said Placer County Sheriff's Detective Bryan Mattison.
And nobody would see her alive again.
"The next we know, her boyfriend's kind of looking for her that night, she doesn't come home," said Mattison. "He goes to the school, is calling family. 'What's going on?' He reports her missing."
Hawkley's ex-husband and their three children are worried too, but are trying not to be alarmed.
Then two days later, less than a mile from Eureka Elementary,"
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Cops investigating the case at the time wanted to know the same thing, but they struggled to find a motive. Tests to determine if Hawkley had been sexually assaulted were inconclusive. It didn't appear to be robbery, because her purse and other personal property were still in the van. Nor was there any evidence of jealousy or a romantic encounter with someone she might have just met.
Police investigate a report of a stranger parked in a Volkswagen Bug outside Eureka Elementary the day Hawkley disappeared, but it leads nowhere."
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"But they immediately discount one of two main persons of interest: Cherilyn's boyfriend; and her ex-husband, Royal Hawkley."
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The two detectives have returned to the scene of the crime for evidence that may have been overlooked and could now be forensically examined.
And they have already taken old evidence collected over the past 22 years, including the rope she was strangled with, and submitted it for fresh DNA analysis they hope will ensnare their suspect. They are also painstakingly sifting through what they call the "murder book."
"Basically it's thousands of pages in multiple books," said Mattison. "It's every statement, report, newspaper clipping, card ever sent to the department, every interview ever done. It literally runs to 30 pounds of paper. The advantage to that is that is the information you need is in that case somewhere. The suspect's statement is in there."
"Now we have the ability to incorporate scientific evidence into those statements to either contradict or corroborate someone's statement, which gives us the ability to say 'You're absolutely lying, you lied to us back then, you're lying to us now,'" said Det. Joyce."