Cary Stayner was born on August 13, 1961, the first of five children born to Delbert Foy and Kay Stayner in
Merced,
California.[2] He had three sisters and a younger brother,
Steven Gregory Stayner.[3][4] On December 4, 1972, 7-year-old Steven was abducted by
child molesterKenneth Parnell. He was held by his abductor 38 miles (61 km) away in
Mariposa County, and later in
Mendocino County, until he was aged 14, when he managed to escape with another of Parnell's victims,
Timothy White.[5]
Cary later stated that he felt
neglected while his parents grieved over the loss of Steven.[6] When Steven escaped and returned home, he received massive media attention which resulted in the 1989 release of a television
miniseries based on his experience, I Know My First Name Is Steven (also known as The Missing Years),[7][8][citation needed] based on the
true crime book of the same name; Cary once again felt overshadowed by the attention his brother got. Steven, who later married and had two children, died in a motorcycle accident in 1989.
Although it is believed that Steven's kidnapping contributed to Cary's
sexual deviancy, Cary claimed to authorities after his arrest that he had begun
fantasizing about abducting and murdering women since he was aged 7, prior to the abduction of his brother.[9] While a friend of his sister was staying over at his house, Cary exposed himself to her.
When he was aged 3, Cary was diagnosed with
trichotillomania and put on medication, though the condition continued to affect him during his high school years; the consequential bald spots led to him being severely
bullied and having to perpetually wear a
baseball cap. Cary exhibited intelligence that was noted by classmates and teachers, and he was put in accelerated classes as a result. Due to his cartoon contributions to the school newspaper, Cary was named the "most creative" student in his graduating class at the age of 18 at
Merced High School.[6]
After graduating, Cary worked as a window installer at a glass company, where he allegedly developed a fantasy about ramming a truck into the workplace, killing everyone there and setting the business on fire. In 1991, Cary tried to gas himself to death with
carbon monoxide. In 1995, he was admitted to a mental institution after claiming to have had a
nervous breakdown and was released after receiving treatment.[10] Cary was also arrested in 1997 for possession of
marijuana[6] and
methamphetamines,[11] although these charges were eventually dropped.
Victims
Confirmed
In 1997, Stayner was hired as a handyman at the Cedar Lodge motel in
El Portal, California, just outside the
Highway 140 entrance to
Yosemite National Park. Stayner found all of his confirmed victims at the Cedar Lodge motel.[6] Between February and July 1999, he murdered at least two women and two teenagers.[12]
On March 18, 1999, 42-year-old Carole Evon Sund and 16-year-old Argentine exchange student Silvina Pelosso, were found in the trunk of the charred remains of Sund's
Pontiac rental car.[12] The bodies were burned beyond recognition and were identified using dental records. Sund was
strangled with rope and shot but was not
raped, while Pelosso was raped and shot. A week later, a note was sent to the police with a hand-drawn map indicating the location of the third victim, Sund's 15-year-old daughter Juliana "Juli" Sund.[12] The top of the note read, "We had fun with this one." Investigators went to the location depicted on the map and found the remains of Juli, who had been raped and whose throat had been cut. Detectives began interviewing employees of the motel where the three victims had been staying just before their deaths on February 15. One of those employees was Stayner, but he was not considered a suspect at that point because he had no criminal history and remained calm during the police interview.[13]
Several months later, on July 22, 1999, the
decapitated body of
Yosemite Institute employee Joie Ruth Armstrong, a 26-year-old naturalist, was found. Eyewitnesses reported seeing a blue 1972
International Scout parked outside the cabin where she was staying one day prior, on July 21. Detectives traced this vehicle to Stayner, which led to him becoming the
prime suspect in the case.[12]FBI agents John Boles and Jeff Rinek found Stayner staying at the Laguna del Sol
nudist resort in
Wilton, where he was arrested and taken to
Sacramento for questioning. During his interrogation, Stayner shocked the agents when he confessed not only to Armstrong's murder but to the killings of Pelosso and the Sunds.[14] His vehicle yielded evidence proving his link to Armstrong.
Suspected
Following his arrest, Stayner was suspected of being responsible for other
homicides and disappearances in addition to his four known victims. Given that similar offenders started their killing sprees at far younger ages, investigators have stated that they think Stayner may have additional victims.[15]
Patricia Marie "Patty" Hicks Dahlstrom, age 28, last contacted family in September 1982 after relocating to Merced from
Washington State.[16] Hicks was a member of the San Anda Apostolic Church, founded by
cult leader Donald Gibson, which was discovered to have carried out acts of
sexual assault under religious pretenses.[17] After Gibson was convicted of four
sex offenses in 1981, Hicks left the cult and was last seen by her roommate taking
public transportation to Yosemite National Park. A severed arm and hand were recovered from the park in June 1983.[18] A skull was discovered nearby in 1988. In April 2021,
genetic genealogy identified the remains as being those of Hicks.[19] Stayner is known to have been acquainted with Gibson at the time of his 1981 trial, which he attended. Authorities believe Stayner may have chosen to kill Hicks in retaliation for testifying against Gibson.[20]
On December 26, 1990, Stayner's paternal uncle, 42-year-old Jesse Jerrold "Jerry" Stayner, was shot to death inside his Merced residence with his own
shotgun. The murder was never solved and Cary Stayner, who had lived with his uncle at the time of the shooting, became a suspect after his arrest. Stayner later claimed that his uncle had molested him around the same time of Steven Stayner's kidnapping.[12]
In October 1994, severed human hands were found near the
New Melones Reservoir. On December 13, 1994, a headless and handless torso was found in a cluster of trees off Camp 9 Road near
Vallecito. A forensic pathologist determined that the detached hands belonged to the body. In December 1995, the remains were identified as belonging to 24-year-old Sharalyn Mavonne Murphy.[21] Her head has never been found. The
FBI investigated Murphy's death to determine a link to Stayner due to similarities between her death and the murder of Joie Armstrong.[22] Authorities also reviewed the case of 34-year-old Denise Smith, whose
decomposed body was discovered in a 50-gallon burn barrel off Jacksonville Road near
Don Pedro Reservoir in December 1994.
Michael Larry "Mike" Madden, age 20, planned to meet friends at Sand Bar Flat Campground in the
Stanislaus National Forest near
Sonora on August 10, 1996, for camping and fishing.[23] Madden left his family's home at around 5:00 a.m. and was never seen again.[24] At 2:00 a.m. on August 12, his companions showed up to the predetermined spot but found no sign of him.[25][26] Authorities have considered that Madden may have been a victim of Stayner.
Trial and conviction
Stayner was tried in federal court for Armstrong's murder since it occurred on federal land. To avoid a possible
death sentence, he pleaded guilty to premeditated
first-degree murder, felony first-degree murder, kidnapping resulting in death and attempted aggravated sexual abuse resulting in death. During the sentencing hearing, Stayner stunned the courtroom when he suddenly broke down in tears and apologized. "I wish I could take it back, but I can't," he said. "I wish I could tell you why I did such a thing, but I don't even know myself. I'm so sorry. I wish there was a reason. But there isn't. It's senseless." Armstrong's mother started crying as she listened to Stayner, and said afterward that she believed his apology was genuine.[27] Stayner was sentenced to life in prison without parole.
Stayner pleaded
not guilty by reason of insanity to the other murders in state court. His lawyers claimed that the Stayner family had a history of sexual abuse and
mental illness, manifesting itself not only in the murders, but also his
obsessive-compulsive disorder and his request to be provided with
child pornography in return for his confession.[28] Dr. Jose Arturo Silva testified that Stayner had obsessive-compulsive disorder, mild
autism and
paraphilia.[29] He was nevertheless found sane and convicted of three counts of first-degree murder with special circumstances and one count of kidnapping by a jury on August 27, 2002.[30] Since being
sentenced to death for the killings, Stayner has been housed at the Adjustment Center on
death row at
San Quentin State Prison since 2002.[31] Stayner remains on
death row,[32][1] although there have been no executions in California since a 2006 court ruling over flaws in the administration of capital punishment in the state.[32]
Media portrayals
Stayner's case was featured in an episode of American Justice produced in 2002.[33]
In 2011, Stayner's investigation and arrest were featured in an episode of FBI: Criminal Pursuit, titled "Trail of Terror", airing on
Investigation Discovery.[34]
In 2013, the history of Stayner's progress from student to the convicted murderer was told in an episode of the U.K. television series Born to Kill? titled, "Yosemite Park Slayer."[35]
The American Court TV (now
TruTV) television series Mugshots released an episode on the Stayner case titled "Cary Stayner – The Cedar Lodge Killings".[36]
In 2018, the
Reelz channel aired an hour-long documentary about the murders titled Yosemite Park Killer.
On January 26, 2019,
ABC News broadcast a
20/20 episode covering the Stayner brothers, titled "Evil in Eden".[37]
August 30, 2020
HLN aired "The Yosemite Murders: The Missing Women (Part 1)" and "The Yosemite Murders: The Evil Side (Part 2)", from the documentary series How It Really Happened.
October 31, 2020, Casefile, an
Australian true crime podcast, released the first of two episodes on Stayner with the title "The Yosemite Sightseer Murders." The second episode was released on November 7, 2020. The podcast released an episode on Steven Stayner's kidnapping earlier in 2020.
Allie Yang, Joseph Rhee, and Keren Schiffman, 2019, "Steven and Cary Stayner: The tale of two brothers' horror and heroism," ABC News (online), July 19, 201, See
[1], accessed September 2, 2020. [Subtitle: "The two brothers are both famous and both knew unspeakable horror."]
Mara Bovsun, 2012, "Justice Story: Twisted trail of 'Yosemite murders' leads to resort handyman," New York Daily News (online), Sunday, September 30, 2012, see
[2], accessed June 12, 2015. [Subtitle: "Cary Stayner planned to kill his girlfriend and her daughter; instead, he killed four other women."]
CNN, 2001 [1999], "Yosemite suspect confesses to 4 killings, cnn.com (online), July 27, 1999, see
[3], accessed June 12, 2015.
Stacy Finz, 2002, "Yosemite killer sentenced to death," SFGATE (online), December 13, 2002, see
[4], accessed June 12, 2015. [Excerpts from Stayner's confession; subtitle: "Terrible details of Stayner case stun even the judge."]
Smith, Carlton (1999), Murder at Yosemite, St. Martin's True Crime Library, St. Martins Press,
ISBN978-0-312-97457-2
McDougal, Dennis (2000), The Yosemite Murders, Ballantine Books,
ISBN978-0-345-43834-8
Rinek, Jeffrey L. (2019). In the name of the children : an FBI agent's relentless pursuit of America's worst predators. London: Marilee Strong.
ISBN978-1-5294-0188-2.
OCLC1111594447.
References
^
ab"Stayner, Cary Anthony". Inmate Locator. California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. Retrieved July 19, 2019.