TX TX - Cheryl Henry, 22, & Andy Atkinson, 21, Houston, 21 Aug 1990

  • #61


HOUSTON -- Authorities hope a reward will help bring someone forward with clues about a couple killed 15 years ago in an area of west Houston once known as Lovers Lane.

Officers with the Houston Police Department found the bodies of Cheryl Henry, 22, and Andy Atkinson, 21, on Aug. 23, 1990, about 100 yards apart in a wooded area that is now a business park in the 1300 block of Enclave Round.



Investigators said they have run extensive DNA tests on evidence found at the scene and have interviewed dozens of possible suspects but nothing has led to an arrest.

Police said that the killer raped Henry, leaving behind his DNA. Both victims' throats were slashed.

"The ethnicity of the individual who left the suspect sample is 100 percent European," said Sgt. Billy Belk, with the Houston Police Department.

Investigators believe more than one person was involved in the killings.

Authorities released a note that surfaced in 2000, 10 years after the couple was killed. In the note, the writer demanded $100,000 to reveal the killers' identities. Investigators said the note was anonymously mailed to investigators in March 2001. No one ever came forward and the letter-writer was never found.

The victims' families spoke at a Crime Stoppers news conference Tuesday morning.

"He won't have a family, children, grandchildren. I'll never have grandchildren," Atkinson's mother, Ann Fowler said.

The families hope someone will recognize the handwriting in the note.

"School teachers -- people who've known people who've written like this -- bankers," father Bob Henry said.

A $5,000 reward is being offered for information that leads to an arrest and conviction in these cases. Anyone with information should call Crime Stoppers at (713) 222-TIPS.

http://www.officer.com/article/article.jsp?siteSection=7&id=25590

 
  • #62
Actually, there was a pic of the note in the online story and in the newspapers here in houston. Also, all the local new stations had a pic of it on their websites.

Here is a pic of Andy and Cheryl and possibly the note unless it has been deleted now.

http://www.click2houston.com/news/4885372/detail.html
 
  • #63
Yes, the pic of the note is in that link.
 
  • #64
Thank you and so far nothing came from the note. You would think that someone in Houston would recognize that handwriting and come forward. Anyway, I think a whole lot of things about this and nothing has happened in over 15 years. Thanks for reading!
 
  • #65
Bumping for Cheryl
 
  • #66
I'm sorry for your loss. Thank you so much for sharing this story, I won't forget about Cheryl. I had read about the story before and it had always struck me as such a sad and terrible crime. I'm glad to know that Cheryl's step sister is here at WS and still searching for justice. You would make any sister proud.
 
  • #67
Thank you Mullins!
 
  • #68
Bump..........thinking of Cheryl and Andy
 
  • #69
bump............
 
  • #70
Such a tragic loss, my heart goes out to both families.
Has there been much looking into what had gone on at the nightclub they were at earlier? How far away was the nightclub to where they were murdered? They were there with another couple right? I'm just wondering if there wasn't someone there that night who took notice of them and somehow heard of where they were going later or were able to follow them. Was there anyone showing interest in your sister, staring a lot? Your sister was covered up afterwards which makes me think it was someone who knew her.
I agree with the poster who suggested having fundraisers to get the reward higher, it's sad to say but higher dollar amounts sometimes seems to make the difference in ones talking. Raising the amount also can get more publicity both by having fundraisers and then announcing the reward amounts.
I'm with the other poster on this being able to be done with just 1 killer, he could have held them both with a gun and had them think it was just going to be a robbery, ordered her to tie him up, once he was restrained then he was able to victimize your sister.

OB
 
  • #71
15th anniversary today of my step-sisters murder......still unsolved......amazing with all the technology and valid DNA sample.
 
  • #72
16th anniversary today of my step-sisters murder......still unsolved......amazing with all the technology and valid DNA sample.
 
  • #73
My prayers are with you today Mocity.
 
  • #74
thank you Shadow!
 
  • #75
16th anniversary today of my step-sisters murder......still unsolved......amazing with all the technology and valid DNA sample.
 
  • #76
mocity said:
16th anniversary today of my step-sisters murder......still unsolved......amazing with all the technology and valid DNA sample.



I'm so sorry that you have had to go all of these years without finding out anything about the murder of your sister. I wonder how often they check to see if there is anyone in the system whose DNA matches the sperm taken from your sister? There are new criminals being added daily. You wouldn't think that your sister and her friend were their/his only crime.

I hope that you get the answers that you have searched for for so long one of these days. I don't know how your family can stand the waiting and not learning anything at all. I wonder if the person/persons who did this still live in that area and think they really pulled off the murders and will never be caught. It seems like someone would have talked by now....bragged to someone about pulling off the perfect crime. Someone knows something. It's hard for killers not to brag to someone.
 
  • #77
I have posted this before but August 23rd was 17 years. 17 years ago my step-sister and her boyfriend were murdered while out on a date and the case remains unsolved. It was been called one of the most horrific crimes in Houston's history yet it remains unsolved. Both of their throats were slit and Cheryl was raped. In 2001 an anonymous letter was sent to HPD which was released in 2004 in hopes it might lead to the killers. Below is the 2004 article since it was the most in depth. I would post a copy of the note but I am not sure how to do it.

Paper: HOUSTON CHRONICLE
Date: WED 12/08/2004
Section: A
Page: 1
Edition: 3 STAR

Police hope note brings answers / Letter was sent to HPD 10 years after '90 slayings on `lovers lane'

By S.K. BARDWELL
Staff

Hoping to reinvigorate their investigation of a 14-year-old homicide case, Houston police have released a handwritten note that may have come from the architect of two of the city's most gruesome slayings.
The letter, postmarked in Houston, was received in March 2001, more than 10 years after Cheryl Henry and Andy Atkinson were stabbed to death as they parked on a secluded cul-de-sac in west Harris County.
"It's the kind of case everyone remembers," Houston police Sgt. Billy Belk said. "It sticks in your mind."
In block letters, the note's sender told investigators, "If you want to know who killed C. Henry and A. Atkinson, it will cost $100,000." The note told investigators to reply in the classifieds section of the March 12, 2001, Houston Chronicle and warned, "a lawyer will be hired to make sure u play straight."
The note was answered, according to instructions. "We do want to know what you know about Henry/Atkinson," the classified ad read. A number was given for the note-sender or a lawyer to contact investigators "with directions on playing straight."
Through the years, police had gotten calls whenever an anniversary or other publicity brings the case back to the public's attention.
The timing of the note, postmarked March 1, 2001, was odd, Belk said, in that it came so long after the slayings, and during a period when the case was getting no publicity. The most recent news story about the case, a 10-year retrospective, had been published Sept. 13, 2000.
Note suppressed
The possibilities the note offered were enticing to investigators sitting at yet another dead end in the case, and Belk said the note was never publicized.
"We kept pretty tight-lipped about it," he said, "to see if we got a response."
They never did.
Today, investigators say, it's a pretty sure bet that whoever sent the note does not intend to contact police again. Belk hopes that by releasing the contents of the note someone may recognize the handwriting, the language or some other scrap of information when it is published.
Cheryl Henry, 22, was home for the summer from classes at Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches. Andy Atkinson, whose 22nd birthday was only days away, had just moved home after finishing college in North Carolina.
The two left on a date the evening of Aug. 21, 1990, along with Henry's younger sister, Shane, and her escort. The sisters said their goodbyes when the couples left the Bayou Mama club near Westheimer and Gessner late that night.
Neither Henry nor Atkinson returned from their date; their families reported them missing early the next day. On the evening of Aug. 22, a Houston patrol officer spotted Atkinson's car parked on Enclave Round, a then-undeveloped area off the 1300 block of Enclave Parkway that young people often used as a "lovers lane."
Blood in the car appeared fresh. When a computer check of the vehicle's license plate showed it belonged to a missing person, a tracking dog was called to search the nearby heavy woods.
The dog led police to Henry's body about 200 yards away. Her clothes, found nearby, had been cut from her body, probably with the same knife used to slash her throat. Her hands were bound behind her with hemp rope. Her killer had tried to cover her body with boards from a rotting cedar fence.
A bunch of deflated balloons hung Dali-like over a tree limb near Henry's body, having no apparent connection with her death but adding to the surreal quality of the grim scene.
Darkness halted the search for Atkinson. A Houston police officer was posted to stand watch until dawn, when searchers returned and quickly discovered the second body.
Atkinson was found about 100 yards from Henry. He was fully clothed, his hands tied behind him with similar rope. He had been seated with his back against a tree trunk before his throat was slashed. He still had his money and watch.
The young couple had evidently parked to neck, Belk said. The car's front seats were reclined, the engine had been turned off but the key left in the auxiliary position so the music would stay on. Henry's shoes and bag were in the front floorboard.
Suspects cleared
In the first months, investigators chased hundreds of leads. Several potential suspects were identified.
Cheryl Henry's killer had raped her, and left behind DNA. One by one, all the suspects were cleared through DNA comparisons.
Problems within HPD's DNA lab began unfolding in 2002 and ultimately resulted in the lab's closure and the retesting of hundreds of DNA samples, but Belk is confident in the work done on the DNA left by Henry's killer.
That DNA was profiled at the DNA lab founded at Baylor College of Medicine by renowned researcher Dr. C. Thomas Caskey, Belk said. The sample was entered into the state's Combined DNA Indexing System, but a link was never made to any other crime.
The sample from Henry's killer was later sent by HPD to the Texas Department of Public Safety for comparison with DNA from Angel Maturino Resendiz, a convicted rail-riding serial killer. That didn't provide a match either, Belk said.
Last month, Belk and members of Henry's family met with Houston Police Chief Harold Hurtt, who approved the independent retesting of all the DNA samples taken from possible suspects and eliminated through tests done at HPD's lab, Belk said.
He said the case has never gone completely cold.
"We've gotten at least one new lead every year," Belk said, "and I follow up on every one of them."
Noting that most investigators have at least one case they can't let go of, Belk said, "This is mine."
If the case has haunted Belk, it has tortured Barbara Craig, Henry's mother.
"I was always so proud of Cheryl," Craig said recently. "She was the older sister to five other kids. ... The youngest, the twins, were just starting fifth grade that year. Their first day of school was spent at their sister's funeral."
Her daughter's death devastated the family, Craig said. The details made it almost too painful to bear.
"To be killed is horrible," Craig said, "But to be terrorized, tied up, raped ... To think her last moments were of terror, and I wasn't there. Because mothers, you know, that's their job, to make it better."
Several scenarios
Craig said finding the person who killed her daughter and Atkinson is important to the family, although "we try not to base our happiness on whether or not the person is caught."
Atkinson's father could not be reached for comment.
Belk acknowledges the note could be a hoax, but he said it is difficult to see what reward there could be in such a deception. The other possibilities are that the note is from the killer, or from someone who could identify the killer.
The latter would probably be the best news for Belk. In a study published in the Journal of Criminal Justice and Popular Culture in 2002, Seattle University journalism professor Tomas Guillen looked at a half-dozen killers who contacted police or the media before their capture, and concluded that while the killers' missives often helped police link previously unlinked crimes, or proved pivotal in helping convict the offenders once they were caught, they rarely helped identify a killer.
"Although these killers injected themselves into cases, sometimes repeatedly for years, with poems, letters, and telephone calls to investigators or the news media, the communiques did not lead to enough investigative evidence or clues to put an immediate end to a series of slayings," Guillen wrote.
All Belk wants is some foothold he can use to push the case closer to its resolution.
Anyone with information in the case can call Belk at 713-308-3600, or Crime Stoppers at 713-222-TIPS.
...
Houston homicide investigators want to know who wrote them an anonymous letter regarding the 1990 slayings of Cheryl Henry and Andy Atkinson. Their bodies were found near a secluded cul-de-sac in west Harris County. Police got the letter three years ago and are releasing it now in hope that someone with information will come forward.
The letter demanded $100,000 in exchange for the killer’s identity and asked police to respond through the Houston Chronicle’s ``personal column.’’
The letter writer warned that a lawyer would be hired ``to make sure u play straight.’’
 
  • #78
Did they ever get a new sample of this guys dna? I would think he would turn it over willingly if he had nothing to do with this. It is still amazing to me that there has not been a hit on the national database. You know this person had to have commited a crime after this one, and you would have hoped he would have been caught by now. I miss Cheryl I went to school with her in Kilgore, and I she and Shane had just come to Dallas the week before Cheryl was killed. The three of us had a blast in West End and then stayed at the Double Tree. I am so glad I got the chance to see her one last time. I just hope this is solved soon. Someday.
 
  • #79
I have posted about my step-sisters murder case in the past but we now have a new lead. There was a match to the DNA sample taken from Cheryl (from her rapist). The match was from a DNA sample taken from another rape victim. The new article will run in the Houston Chronicle sometime over the next couple of days.

We have set up a website with all the past article's and a composite of the suspect and a note that was written to HPD in the past. Please help us find their killer!
http://www.helpcherylandandy.com/
 
  • #80
I cannot get the link to work but I will send prayers your way!!
 

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