•The details of the kidnapping by DeAngelo on November 10, 1976, are identical to the known circumstances of Janet Kovacich's disappearance—down to the victim and Janet being San Juan High School students—just like DeAngelo’s wife Sharon. The 1976 attack happened at dinnertime on DeAngelo's 3rd wedding anniversary, four blocks from his in-laws’ house.
•DeAngelo entered the victim’s home immediately after her parents left unexpectedly to visit their son in the hospital. The house was staged to hide the broken living room window by replacing the screen, turning off the TV, and locking the door. The victim was walked with her hands bound over a fence to the neighbor’s yard, into a culvert under the street, and 1/4 mile down a canal to a pre-planned outdoor attack site.
•Luckily, DeAngelo left the victim alive, and she made her way home hours later with her parents still believing that she’d left the house voluntarily—they had no idea that there had been forced entry, and a kidnapping in their home.
•On October 18, 1976, DeAngelo was waiting for a 19-yr-old female in the shadows next to the garage at the girl’s home. As soon as she stopped her car in the driveway, DeAngelo forcibly removed her from the vehicle at knifepoint, took her into the shadows, tied her hands, then walked her out onto the sidewalk, around the corner, and assaulted her in the yard of a neighbor’s house. He had laid out additional bindings/gag/blindfold (torn towels) at that attack location before she got home.
•DeAngelo admitted to kidnapping Beth Snelling from her bedroom, and shooting her father to death when he ran out of the house to save her. She had been stalked and watched for at least 18 months prior to the night of the attack.
• Because the kidnapping was interrupted, police never determined exactly where DeAngelo had planned to take Beth.
Front of Snelling home.
Back Patio at Snelling home--including the seating area described, and the brick planter where Mrs. Snelling's purse was found.
Barbque room leading to back door described by Beth. Point of entry with screen missing was the sliding window to the right of the sink.
Backyard of Snelling home.
Back door of Snelling home through which Mr. Snelling exited and reentered the home. Point of entry window to the right of the door.
Missing in this photo is the chain link fence which ran between the patio and the driveway, and slowed Mr. Snelling enough for DeAngelo to get off two shots.
To the left of the door is Beth's bedroom window, with the a/c unit beneth it. The noise Beth heard outside her window earlier in the evening likely was DeAngelo disabiling the a/c unit--either to quiet it so he could hear noises from within the home during the kidnaping, or to force the family to leave windows open.
•Thirteen of the EAR victims were moved various distances within their homes, outdoors, or from inside the house to the backyard at either knifepoint, gunpoint, or under threat from a weapon.