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By Meg Kinnard and Mitch Weiss
Associated Press
POSTED: 08:18 a.m. EDT, Jul 08, 2009
COLUMBIA, S.C.: A peach farmer. A woman and her elderly mother. A furniture store owner and his teenage daughter.
South Carolina serial killer Patrick Burris's seemingly random choice of victims is a major obstacle for authorities trying to determine his motive, according to a former FBI profiler.
The reason behind the six-day killing spree may have died with Burris, 41, a career criminal who was shot to death Monday by police investigating a burglary complaint at a home in Gastonia, N.C. Ballistics from a gun found with Burris linked him to five slayings that terrorized the rural South Carolina community of Gaffney, S.C., 30 miles away.
''This guy has got victims ranging from 15 to 83, he's got males, he's got females,'' said Mark Safarik, who retired in 2007 as a senior profiler in the FBI's famed Behavioral Analysis Unit. ''I don't think that he had the motivation of a serial killer. . . . How he got access to them and what the engagement was with these victims would go a long way to tell you what this dynamic is.''
Burris was well known to authorities as a bully, so intimidating that a scared elderly man once refused to testify against him and extortion charges were thrown out.
He had repeated run-ins with police for stealing and writing bad checks, and authorities said Tuesday they weren't surprised his crimes escalated. They said Burris, paroled in April after serving eight years in a North Carolina prison, should have never been released.
''He always had a violent streak,'' Rockingham County Sheriff Sam Page said. ''He was very intimidating and very threatening from his appearance: He was at least 6-5 and 250 pounds. You didn't want to mess with him.''
Police were still piecing together details of his life. Records show he had lived in Rockingham County, N.C., a rural county near the Virginia border, since the late 1980s, but he also spent a lot of time behind bars.
He was arrested more than 30 times in North Carolina alone the first time in 1989 for blackmail. He also had convictions in Florida, Virginia, West Virginia and Maryland.
Most of his convictions in North Carolina involved stealing from homes and businesses and bad checks, records show.
But those cases don't reveal his true character, Page said.
In 1996, Page, then a detective at the Eden Police Department in north-central North Carolina, arrested Burris for extortion. He was accused of forcing an elderly man to write a check and cash it at the bank. But the charges were dropped when the man refused to testify.
''He intimidated that man. He was scared. There was no way he was going to testify,'' Page said.
In another case, Burris was charged with robbery and assault in 2000 in Eden, but those charges were dropped when the man ''backed out and refused to show up for court,'' Eden Police Chief Reece Pyrtle Jr. said.
''You didn't want to cross him,'' Pyrtle said. ''He had that scowl.''
South Carolina Law Enforcement Division Chief Reggie Lloyd, a former judge and federal prosecutor, said more should be done to keep habitual offenders like Burris behind bars.
''At some point, either prosecutors or judges did not believe that it warranted more time. ... Our entire system has really got to get serious about how we deal with these types of offenders,'' Lloyd said.
North Carolina Corrections Department officials were actually looking for Burris when he was shot because he had violated his parole. Page said authorities did everything they could.
''Every officer along the way did his job,'' he said. ''But we have 37,000 prisoners committed to prison in North Carolina and when those prisons get full, our jails start backing up. I run a jail. I know they can't put everyone in jail. They have alternative programs to incarceration. But there are some that just need to be in jail and this is one who just needed to be in jail.''
The Gaffney killings began when peach farmer Kline Cash, 63, was killed June 27. Four days later, 83-year-old Hazel Linder and her daughter, 50-year-old Gena Linder Parker, were found bound and shot in the older woman's home. The next day, Stephen Tyler and his 15-year-old daughter Abby were found shot in their family's furniture store.
The investigation isn't over. Gaffney Police Chief Richard Turner said they were tracing the suspect's activities and try to figure out if he has killed others.
''We are all asking why? Why here? Why these individuals? Why these victims?'' Turner said. ''That's something that this guy took with him to his grave.''
Burris' death relieved many area residents who have been armed and on edge. Business owners finally unlocked their doors Tuesday, but many still kept their weapons close.
''I still have my pistol under the counter, and I'll keep it right here,'' said Matthew McDonald, owner of Bookshelf Florist, as he lifted his small .38-caliber pistol into view.
Weiss reported from Charlotte, N.C. Associated Press writers Susanne M. Schafer in Gaffney, and Seanna Adcox in Columbia, also contributed to this report.
COLUMBIA, S.C.: A peach farmer. A woman and her elderly mother. A furniture store owner and his teenage daughter.
South Carolina serial killer Patrick Burris's seemingly random choice of victims is a major obstacle for authorities trying to determine his motive, according to a former FBI profiler.
The reason behind the six-day killing spree may have died with Burris, 41, a career criminal who was shot to death Monday by police investigating a burglary complaint at a home in Gastonia, N.C. Ballistics from a gun found with Burris linked him to five slayings that terrorized the rural South Carolina community of Gaffney, S.C., 30 miles away.
''This guy has got victims ranging from 15 to 83, he's got males, he's got females,'' said Mark Safarik, who retired in 2007 as a senior profiler in the FBI's famed Behavioral Analysis Unit. ''I don't think that he had the motivation of a serial killer. . . . How he got access to them and what the engagement was with these victims would go a long way to tell you what this dynamic is.''
Burris was well known to authorities as a bully, so intimidating that a scared elderly man once refused to testify against him and extortion charges were thrown out.
He had repeated run-ins with police for stealing and writing bad checks, and authorities said Tuesday they weren't surprised his crimes escalated. They said Burris, paroled in April after serving eight years in a North Carolina prison, should have never been released.
''He always had a violent streak,'' Rockingham County Sheriff Sam Page said. ''He was very intimidating and very threatening from his appearance: He was at least 6-5 and 250 pounds. You didn't want to mess with him.''
Police were still piecing together details of his life. Records show he had lived in Rockingham County, N.C., a rural county near the Virginia border, since the late 1980s, but he also spent a lot of time behind bars.
He was arrested more than 30 times in North Carolina alone the first time in 1989 for blackmail. He also had convictions in Florida, Virginia, West Virginia and Maryland.
Most of his convictions in North Carolina involved stealing from homes and businesses and bad checks, records show.
But those cases don't reveal his true character, Page said.
In 1996, Page, then a detective at the Eden Police Department in north-central North Carolina, arrested Burris for extortion. He was accused of forcing an elderly man to write a check and cash it at the bank. But the charges were dropped when the man refused to testify.
''He intimidated that man. He was scared. There was no way he was going to testify,'' Page said.
In another case, Burris was charged with robbery and assault in 2000 in Eden, but those charges were dropped when the man ''backed out and refused to show up for court,'' Eden Police Chief Reece Pyrtle Jr. said.
''You didn't want to cross him,'' Pyrtle said. ''He had that scowl.''
South Carolina Law Enforcement Division Chief Reggie Lloyd, a former judge and federal prosecutor, said more should be done to keep habitual offenders like Burris behind bars.
''At some point, either prosecutors or judges did not believe that it warranted more time. ... Our entire system has really got to get serious about how we deal with these types of offenders,'' Lloyd said.
North Carolina Corrections Department officials were actually looking for Burris when he was shot because he had violated his parole. Page said authorities did everything they could.
''Every officer along the way did his job,'' he said. ''But we have 37,000 prisoners committed to prison in North Carolina and when those prisons get full, our jails start backing up. I run a jail. I know they can't put everyone in jail. They have alternative programs to incarceration. But there are some that just need to be in jail and this is one who just needed to be in jail.''
The Gaffney killings began when peach farmer Kline Cash, 63, was killed June 27. Four days later, 83-year-old Hazel Linder and her daughter, 50-year-old Gena Linder Parker, were found bound and shot in the older woman's home. The next day, Stephen Tyler and his 15-year-old daughter Abby were found shot in their family's furniture store.
The investigation isn't over. Gaffney Police Chief Richard Turner said they were tracing the suspect's activities and try to figure out if he has killed others.
''We are all asking why? Why here? Why these individuals? Why these victims?'' Turner said. ''That's something that this guy took with him to his grave.''
Burris' death relieved many area residents who have been armed and on edge. Business owners finally unlocked their doors Tuesday, but many still kept their weapons close.
''I still have my pistol under the counter, and I'll keep it right here,'' said Matthew McDonald, owner of Bookshelf Florist, as he lifted his small .38-caliber pistol into view.
Weiss reported from Charlotte, N.C. Associated Press writers Susanne M. Schafer in Gaffney, and Seanna Adcox in Columbia, also contributed to this report.
