Steven M. Zelich is scheduled to appear in court in Wisconsin on Friday afternoon on two counts of hiding a corpse. Authorities say Zelich, a 52-year-old security guard from West Allis, Wisconsin, met his victims online, bound and killed them and kept their bodies for months, either in his vehicle or his home, though he has not yet been charged in their deaths.
http://www.wbay.com/story/22105612/2...ported-missing
Quote:
Authorities say Victoria L Prokopovitz, 59, was last seen at about 10 p.m. April 25 at her home at 5118 Kunesh Road.
She was discovered missing the next morning.
Authorities say she suffers from depression and may be harm to herself.
She may be wearing shoes with a wide, stacked heel and a white jacket.
Prokopovitz left behind her purse and its contents, along with her cell phone. She does not have a vehicle.
She's described as about 5'06", 117 pounds with brown hair and brown eyes
Authorities have not released the identity of the second woman but describe her as a white female with long, dark hair, a pronounced overbite and a small heart tattoo on her lower left abdomen. According to a criminal complaint, Zelich told investigators he killed her in Kenosha County, Wisconsin, in late 2012 or early 2013 and Simonson at a hotel in Rochester, Minnesota, in November.
This makes my skin crawl. I live in West Allis (Born & Raised), less than a mile from his house. I don't know any more than you guys do (I actually get most of my info here lately!) But I, for one, am not surprised that WAPD did not press charges for the handcuffed woman back in 2001. They have a history of inneffectiveness. I was discouraged from pressing charges following a Sexual assault which occurred in my home in 2011. I had been drinking (It was my birthday!), and WAPD officers flat out implied that they did not believe me. I can't explain it, but the way I was treated was almost like they thought I had "deserved" this. Probably the same attitude they had for that poor naked woman Zelich was caught with in 2001.
Maybe if they had taken the 2001 incident, this wouldn't have happened to those women.
How can someone hide a body inside an apartment building for 9-12 months? Wouldn't someone notice the smell? Do you think he thought that if he let the bodies decompose enough, his physical (DNA) evidence would deteriorate?
I think he must be a narcissistic serial killer. Why else would he be so bold as to leave those suitcases somewhere he KNEW they would eventually be found?
The arrest of a former police officer this week after the discovery of two women's bodies stuffed into suitcases and dumped in Wisconsin has raised questions about the investigation. Chief among them: Did police do everything they could to locate one of the victims, a mother who vanished in November, before she turned up dead?
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Jennifer Reitz, spokeswoman for Geneva police, who are leading the investigation into the discovery of the bodies, on Thursday declined to discuss whether authorities had made attempts to contact Zelich prior to his arrest. She also declined to confirm whether authorities were aware of an April 18 classified ad that appeared in Wisconsin Super Ads. The ad, placed anonymously, accused Zelich of holding Simonson captive.
This has got to be her. Heart tattoo.
https://www.findthemissing.org/en/cases/2721/9?current_page=reports
Why would an ex-cop hold on to bodies for that long? Surely he would know how to dispose of a body without being caught? Looks to me like he wanted to be caught!
That crossed my mind too. I also think it's possible he got some kind of kick out of dumping the suitcases a half mile from the police station. I don't for a second believe that location was coincidental. He had the bodies a long time. He chose that location for a reason.
I'm sure the police monitor newspaper comments, but there's at least one woman who has posted that SZ is her "ex."
http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/suspect-arrested-bodies-found-suitcases-24312956
oh yes, there is a "boys club" but murder usually gets a current officer special treatment once in custody, not ignoring the murder.
The police in Minnesota (Farmington and/or Rochester) screwed up the most IMHO, as it sounds like Laura's family gave them a lot of info about SZ. It would've been MN police job to prove probable cause to a judge in MN, then it would've been forwarded to WAPD for them to carry out.
He's had them for months. Why just now dump the suitcases? And why in such an easily found area? And wow, how many more missing women is he responsible for?
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