FL FL - Daniel Owen Conahan Jr. - Hog Trail Killer

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madamx

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The Twisted Case of the Hog Trail Murders


The Twisted Case of the Hog Trail Murders
Human remains were found scattered throughout southwestern Florida.

(snips from the article)

Daniel Conahan was born in Charlotte, North Carolina in 1954 and was raised in Punta Gorda, Florida. As a teenager, Conahan realized he was gay, a fact that displeased his parents, who sent him to several psychiatrists. A loner in high school, Conahan enlisted in the Navy four years after he graduated, but it was a short-lived career.

In 1978, he was accused of solicitation after attempting to lure fellow soldiers to a motel off base. Conahan was turned in and threatened with a court martial, but nothing came of the case when the district attorney couldn’t find anyone willing to testify against him. A few months later, Conahan made a sexual advance on another soldier, which resulted in a brawl. With a reputation as a troublemaker, the Navy discharged him.

Conahan stayed in Chicago for the next 15 years before moving back to his hometown of Punta Gorda in 1993 to live with his elderly parents. In 1995, he became a licensed practical nurse, having graduated at the top of his class from Charlotte Vocational-Technical Center.


Not long after Conahan’s return to Florida, mutilated male corpses began to turn up. The first was found in Punta Gorda in 1994. The man’s genitals had been removed and there was evidence of rope burns. He was never identified.

Four more male victims were discovered throughout the area in early 1996, each bearing similar injuries. With police fearing that there may be a serial killer on the loose, there was finally a break in the case in April of 1996. A sixth body was identified as 21-year-old Richard Allen Montgomery, a man who had gone missing just the day before he was found. With this tightened timeline, investigators were able to narrow in on a suspect.


Witnesses came forward who indicated Daniel Conahan as a person of interest, including two men who had narrowly escaped him. One fled when Conahan’s car got stuck driving down a dirt road, while the other, a man by the name of Stanley Burden, had barely survived the encounter. He told police that Conahan offered him money to pose for nude photographs. Conahan then drove Burden out to a remote wooded location, tied him to a tree, sexually assaulted him, and nearly strangled him to death.

Conahan’s house was searched, turning up evidence that linked him to both Stanley Burden and Richard Montgomery. Conahan was arrested and tried for the murder of Montgomery. While he awaited trial, yet another victim was found who had been killed in a similar manner.


Conahan waived his right to a jury trial, allegedly because he feared that a jury of conservative Floridians would be biased against him as a gay man. His bench trial commenced in August of 1999. The star witness in the trial was Stanley Burden. Though Conahan’s lawyer attacked Burden’s credibility—coincidentally, he himself was a convicted pedophile—the evidence was damning.

After just 25 minutes of deliberation, Judge William Blackwell found Conahan guilty of first-degree premeditated murder and kidnapping. He was sentenced to death.

Daniel Conahan is currently housed at Union Correctional Institution in Raiford, Florida. He may be locked away, but the Hog Trail Murders still haunt southwestern Florida—especially since clues from the past keep turning up.

Several more bodies matching Conahan's distinctive pattern of attack have been found since his incarceration: one in 2000, two in 2001, and one in 2002.

Then in 2007, Floridians were rocked by the discovery of the mass burial site in Fort Myers. Stanley Burden had been attacked within a mile of that location. The timeline of the victims' deaths, the location of their bodies, and the manner of death led police to believe that Conahan was responsible, bringing his suspected number of victims up to 19.


Today, several of the bodies linked to the case of the Hog Trail Murders remain unidentified. In February of 2020, the Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office released a new rendering of the first known victim, a man who was found in early 1994. The updated rendering of what he would have looked like when he was alive was created with the help of Palm Beach County’s Forensic Imaging Unit and new technology.
 
This is a timeline I have come up with of Daniel Conahan

Daniel Conahan | Military Wiki | Fandom (wikia.org)


Daniel Owen Conahan Jr.(born May 11, 1954)

Moved with his family to Punta Gorda, Florida shortly after birth.

1973 He graduated Miami Norland High School

1977 Joined the United States Navy
stationed at Naval Station Great Lakes in Illinois

1978 he was nearly court-martialed for homosexual solicitation and was discharged a few months later after more homosexual behavior triggered a large fight

After his Navy discharge, Conahan stayed in Chicago for 13 years

1993 Moved back to Punta Gorda to live with his elderly parents

1995 he became a licensed practical nurse, Graduated from Charlotte Vocational-Technical Center He was employed by Charlotte Regional MedicalCenter in Punta Gorda

July 3, 1996, Conahan was arrested and brought to Lee County for the attempted murder of Burden

I was wondering if he went to HS in Miami, was he living in Punta Gorda at that time. Its like almost 2 1/2 hrs to get there. Why would he be going to a HS so far? Also his HS years would of been from 1969 to 1973. I wonder if he killed anyone then?

In 1977 he went to Illinois and was there for 13 years..I wonder if he killed guys there also.? Or I wonder if he got the idea from hearing about Larry Eyler in the news.. He was the big Illinois Serial Killer of young men.. oh wait and so was John Wayne Gacey..
 
February 1, 1994, the mutilated corpse of a man was discovered in Punta Gorda. The man was never identified.

January 1, 1996, a North Port family's dog brought home a male human skull. The North Port skeleton was also never identified

March 7, 1996 A third man's mutilated body was discovered in North Port on. He also remained unidentified until June 1999 when he was identified as John William Melaragno.

April 17, 1996 Another man's skull was found in Charlotte County on
Police searched the surrounding woods and found the rest of the man as well as a second body. The second was a man who had been raped, murdered and mutilated only the day before, and was identified as Richard Allen Montgomery.
The first body was later identified as Kenneth Lee Smith. Speculation became rampant about a serial killer and the media dubbed the murders "The Hog Trail Killings".


May 1996, a few witnesses directed police to Daniel Conahan, including one who had escaped him when Conahan's car became stuck while driving him down a dirt road

Later, police linked Conahan to a 1994 Fort Myers police report where Stanley Burden had been propositioned, tied to a tree, and nearly strangled. Burden survived and had rope scars on his body two years later

July 3, 1996, Conahan was arrested and brought to Lee County for the attempted murder of Burden.

February 1997, he was charged with the murder of Montgomery while the Burden attempted murder charges were dropped.

May 22, 1997 While Conahan awaited trial, another skeleton was found in Charlotte County . 10 months later, DNA identified the remains as William Charles Patten who had disappeared in 1993


August 9, 1999 In Punta Gorda, Conahan waived his right to a jury trial on August 9, 1999

August 17, 1999 Judge William Blackwell deliberated for 25 minutes and found Conahan guilty of first-degree premeditated murder and kidnapping

November 1999 a jury recommended a sentence of death and Judge Blackwell agreed on December 10.


Several more bodies were discovered in the Charlotte County area with similarities to the Hog Trail Killings:
2000 one body
2001 two bodies
2002 one body

March 23, 2007, eight skulls and skeletal remains were found in a wooded area in Fort Myers, the largest such discovery in Florida history. Two were later identified as men who had disappeared in 1995
 
Published Jun. 9, 2021

Who is the Hog Trail killer? A look back at a series of tragic murders that haunted Florida throughout the 90s

SARASOTA, Fla. (WWSB) - News that another potential victim of the Hog Trail Killer has been identified 27 years after his death is a bleak reminder of a terrifying series of deaths that happened in the 1990s known as ‘The Hog Trail Murders.’ Police determined the similar scenes to be the work of the same individual.

Investigators have only been able to charge Daniel Conahan with the murder of one victim. Officials say Conahan tortured, raped and mutilated homosexual males throughout Central Florida.
 
I wonder if this is one of Conahan's victims:

Skeletal remains found in Charlotte County

The remains were on the east side of the Curry Creek Wildlife Preserve in Babcock Ranch. Identification has not been made.
That would not surprise me at all if it was. It isn't that far from Casperson Beach in Venice which is known for hookups.

1651874880755.png
 
Snip:
The Fort Myers Police Department confirmed the identity of one of the men to be Robert Ronald “Bobbie” Soden. His remains were found in a wooded area of east Fort Myers.

According to FMPD, Soden was 30 years old at the time of his last known contact with anyone, and investigators tied him to the Fort Myers area around that time. Family members were located in New Jersey, North Carolina and Washington.

1662485371124.png
 



From 1994 to 1997, about five young men were also found murdered in Charlotte and Lee counties and detectives believe Conahan could be connected to all of them. They believe Conahan lured his victims into the woods, forced them to get naked, strangled them, and cut off their genitals. It was Conahan’s M.O., to tie up his victims, take photographs of them and murder them, investigators say.

Investigators submitted DNA profiles for each of the eight male skeletons from 2007 to the University of North Texas Center for Human Identification. The database is a national clearinghouse for DNA profiles of missing persons and the unidentified dead. Public Awareness campaigns were also conducted by detectives and families that reported a missing family member submitted DNA samples for examination to the submitted profiles. Over time, three of the subjects were identified: Jonathan Tihay, Johnathan Blevins, and Eric Kohler.

Soden is the fourth subject identified, but the investigation will continue until all eight of the victims are identified and their families are notified.
 

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