A suspected serial killer arrested in Arizona< /span> has been linked to the deaths of at least two women, and a third whose body was never found.
Nevada prosecutors say that Charles Gary Sullivan was taken into custody on August 28 in Yavapai County by detectives with the Washoe County Sheriff’s Office Cold Case Unit, with help from the FBI Phoenix Field Office. The 73-year-old was arrested on charges related to the 1979 murder of Julia Woodward.
On November 15, Sullivan was extradited to Nevada on a grand jury indictment for Woodward's murder. According to court documents, prosecutors are asking that bail be denied due to "overwhelming evidence" indicating that Sullivan is connected to the cold case murders of other young women.
The evidence was gathered by detectives with the WCSO's Cold Case Unit, who requested further analysis of items taken from the Woodward scene. Biological evidence examined by the unit helped to identify Charles Sullivan as a possible suspect in Woodward's murder.
JULIA WOODWARD
Woodward's body was found on March 25, 1979, in a remote area of Hungry Valley, 15 miles north of Reno. Woodward was last seen in California on February 1 after leaving for Nevada from her hometown of San Rafael, California.
Investigators determined that a homicide had taken place and noted that Woodward's eyes were sealed shut with band-aids acting as a blindfold, her legs were zip-tied, and a cloth had been used as a gag. Rocks nearby were also covered in hair and blood. Authorities at the time noted that Woodward was only wearing one shoe, and her ID and items of clothing had been taken.
Investigators said Sullivan's DNA from a 2007 crime was linked to DNA found on Woodward's jeans at the time of her murder.
ABC15's Nicole Valdes will have the latest information on the 2007 incident in a live report from Nevada, on ABC15 News at 6 p.m.
JEANNIE SMITH
In December 2007, the Nevada County Sheriff's Office received a tip from a caller reporting that Sullivan had been involved in a homicide in Reno in 1978 or 1979. The caller stated the victim was 18 years old and worked at Circus Circus as a waitress. He also indicated that he had dated the victim for a short time. The caller went on to state he believed Sullivan was involved in numerous similar events in Nevada and Idaho. The woman that the caller was referring to, prosecutors believe, is Jeannie Smith.
Prosecutors say that Jeannie Smith was last seen alive at Circus Circus Casino in Reno at 9 p.m. on October 27, 1978. Smith, who was there on her night off, reportedly told her friend that she was going to "score" some cocaine and that she would be back in an hour. Smith, who told her friend she was leaving with a man named "Chuck" was not seen or heard from again.
Eventually, her skeletal remains were discovered in a shallow grave in Hungry Valley about a mile away from where Julia Woodward's body was found.
Court documents indicate that Smith's zipper to her jeans had been forcibly opened. Investigators also found tape, cloth, and rope at the scene. The tape was observed to be torn into pieces the approximate length of band-aids and was found tangled in Smith's hair. As was the case with Woodward, Smith was found with only one shoe and was missing her ID and items of clothing. Detectives determined that Smith was killed by extreme blunt force trauma to the head.
During their initial investigation into Smith's disappearance, Reno police had created a composite sketch of the man named "Chuck," who was last seen with Smith at Circus Circus. According to prosecutors, the sketch looks remarkably similar to a photograph of Sullivan taken near the time of Smith's disappearance.
While Sullivan was a person of interest in Smith's disappearance early in the investigation, lawyers say he fled Nevada soon after -- not because of that case, but allegedly because of another Reno woman's disappearance at the same time.
LINDA TAYLOR
On March 9, 1979, 23-year-old Linda Taylor was reported missing by her roommate. Soon after her disappearance, local newspapers published articles with officials asking for information about a man last seen with Taylor at the bank just two days before she was reported missing.
A tip at the time led police to Sullivan. When questioned by detectives, Sullivan initially lied and said he had not met Taylor, but later admitted having gone on a date with her. On March 18, 1979, Taylor's car was found abandoned in the parking lot of a grocery store in Reno, approximately 10 miles away from where the bodies of Woodward and Smith were discovered.
Soon after Taylor's car was found, Reno police learned of two girlfriends Sullivans had and tried to interview the women separately, but both reportedly told him that they would not answer any questions. In early April 1979, each of Sullivan's girlfriends told neighbors they were leaving town. One reportedly claimed her father was dying in California, and the other said her mother was dying in Arizona. Sullivan and his girlfriends then fled the state of Nevada, according to prosecutors.
To this day, Taylor's body has never been found.
SULLIVAN'S CAPTURE
Forty years later, multiple agencies stormed Sullivan's home on the Mogollon Rim with guns drawn in an August raid, but Sullivan wasn't home at the time. Sullivan was eventually taken into custody at another location.
On November 15, Sullivan was extradited to Washoe County on a grand jury indictment for Woodward's murder. Nevada's attorney general on Monday filed a motion to maintain a no-bail custody status against Sullivan pending his trial.
Sullivan is scheduled to be arraigned in Washoe County District Court at 11 a.m. on Tuesday.