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Billy Jensen
@Billyjensen
NYT bestseller “Chase Darkness with Me: How One True Crime Writer Started Solving Murders,” Now “Killers Amidst Killers” about murders and the opioid crisis
Los Angeles, CA
Joined September 2008
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    As we all binge The Bundy Tapes on @Netflix and share the trailer for the Zac Efron movie, please remember the victims. These women all had hopes and dreams. They should all have movies made about them. I always try to remember what these monsters took away. #TedBundyTapes
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    Only a team based in Washington DC would schedule fireworks on a bring-your-dog-to-the-park night.
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    Replying to @Billyjensen
    Lynda Ann Healy was 21. She was a psychology major preparing to graduate that semester. Lynda loved working with handicapped children and got up at early every day to report on the skiing conditions for local radio.
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    I have never wanted to punch a face more than this one.
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    Replying to @Billyjensen
    Susan Elaine Rancourt was 19. She worked two full-time jobs in the summer to save up money for tuition. Susan wanted to go into medicine and had 4.0 GPA—while working full time in a nursing home in between classes.
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    Replying to @Billyjensen
    Kathy Parks was 20. She was a world religions major at Oregon State. There is not much written about Kathy. As someone who was also a world religions major, I can hazard a guess at what she might have been looking for—those truths we all have in common, no matter the religion.
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    Replying to @Billyjensen
    Donna Gail Manson was 19. She was a student at Evergreen State College, a very good flute player and was described by Ann Rule as kind of a goth, as her roommate was concerned about Donna's interests in alchemy, magic and death.
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    “The city said there were no outdoor cameras.” I counted four facing the tree where #RobertFuller was found in #palmdale. @PalmdaleSheriff, did you ask for the footage from Ochoa Digital? From Whispering Palms Apartments?
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    Replying to @Billyjensen
    Debra Kent was 17. She wanted to be a social worker. Debby would walk down the street and feed the parking meters of stranger’s cars so they wouldn’t get a ticket. She loved to dance.
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    Replying to @Billyjensen
    Brenda Ball was 22. She was described as a free spirit who had recently left community college and was just trying to find herself.
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    Replying to @Billyjensen
    Denise Naslund was 19. She worked part-time and was taking a computer programming course at night. “Denise is very loving and would often pick me up a gift for no special occasion," her mother said. “When she walks into my home, it’s just like sunshine coming through the door.”
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    Replying to @Billyjensen
    Georgeann Hawkins was 18. In her senior year of high school she was named a Daffodil Princess, and traveled across Washington attending events, giving speeches and once addressed the state legislature. Georgeann graduated with straight A's and excelled in her freshman year at UW.