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Classification: Mass murderer |
Characteristics: Parricide - Burned the bodies |
Number of victims: 5 |
Date of murders: March 1, 1976 |
Date of birth: August 1, 1936 |
Victims profile: His wife, Annette, 37, his mother, Lobelia, 68, and his three sons: William, 14, Brenton, 10, and Geoffrey, 5 |
Method of murder: Hitting with a ball-peen hammer |
Location: Bethesda, Maryland, USA |
Status: Fugitive from justice since 1976 |
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William Bradford
Bishop, Jr. (born August 1,
1936) was a United States Foreign Service officer who
has been a fugitive from justice since allegedly
murdering five members of his family in 1976.
Known
biography
William Bradford Bishop, Jr. was born
in Pasadena, California. He received a BS in history
from Yale, and an MA in international studies (with a
concentration in Africa) from the University of
California system. He also attended Middlebury College.
After his graduation from Yale in
1959, he served 4 years in Army counterintelligence.
Bishop is reported to speak five languages fluently:
English, French, Serbo-Croat, Italian and Spanish.
Bishop joined the U.S. State
Department and served in the U.S. Foreign Service in
many postings overseas. This included postings in the
Italian cities of Verona, Milan, and Florence (where he
did post-graduate work at the University of Florence).
He also served as a foreign service
officer in Africa including posts in Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia, and in Gaborone, Botswana. His last posting
was at State Department Headquarters in Washington as an
Assistant Chief in the Division of Special Activities
and Commercial Treaties.
As of early 1976, he and his wife
Annette (age 37) had three sons, ages 5, 10 and 14. He
was 39 years old, anticipating a promotion, and was
using a prescription drug called Serax, which can be
addictive. On the afternoon of March 1, he learned he
would not receive the promotion he had sought.
The
murders
After learning of this career
disappointment, Bishop told his secretary he didn’t feel
well and left work early. He drove from Foggy Bottom (the
neighborhood where he worked at the U.S. State
Department headquarters ) to what is today Westfield
Montgomery (then called Montgomery Mall) where he
purchased a ball-peen hammer and a gas can, which he
filled at a gas station.
Police believe that he used the
hammer to kill first his wife, then his mother when she
returned home from walking the family's golden retriever,
and finally his three sons in their beds.
With the bodies loaded into the
family station wagon, Bishop drove 275 miles (about 6
hours' drive) to a densely-wooded area off North
Carolina highway 94, about five miles (8 km) south of
Columbia, North Carolina. There, he dug a shallow hole
where he piled the bodies, doused them with gasoline,
and set them ablaze.
The next day, March 2, a North
Carolina state forest ranger was dispatched by a spotter
in a fire tower to an area where smoke was rising from
the trees. The ranger discovered the burned bodies and a
shovel with a label from a store at Montgomery Mall.
It was later confirmed that Bishop
visited a sporting goods store in Jacksonville, North
Carolina that same day and used his credit card to
purchase tennis shoes.
According to witnesses, he had the
family dog with him on a leash, and was possibly, but
not certainly, accompanied by a woman described as "dark
skinned". All later sightings of Bishop are unconfirmed.
According to police reports, a week
later, on March 10, a neighbor of the Bishop's in the
Carderock Springs neighborhood in Bethesda, Maryland
grew concerned about the family's absence claiming she
hadn't seen them for about three weeks.
The neighbor contacted local police
who dispatched a detective to the nearby neighborhood.
After meeting the neighbor, who had a key to their home,
the detective decided to enter inside to see if anything
was wrong. As he approached the front door, he found
droplets of blood on the front porch and entered the
house to discover spattered blood on the floor.
Continuing up the steps, there were
more blood splatterings on the walls and floors as well.
As it seemed it couldn't have gotten any worse, the
detective entered the room which was believed to be the
children's, and the entire room was covered from ceiling
to floor, and wall to wall with blood.
The detective stated that in his 12
years as a police officer, he had never seen such a
disturbing scene. Shortly afterward, dental records were
used to confirm that the bodies found in North Carolina
were the Bishop family.
On March 18, the Bishop family car
was found abandoned at a campground in the Great Smoky
Mountains National Park, about 400 miles (640 km) from
the Columbia-area pyre. The car contained dog biscuits
and a bloody blanket; the spare-tire well in the trunk
was full of blood.
On March 19 a grand jury indicted
Bishop on five counts of first-degree murder and other
charges. Evidence included his disappearance, the
sighting afterward in the vicinity of the bodies, and
bloody stains inside the family home that matched both
his fingerprints and the blood of his family members.
According to a co-worker of Bishop's,
his family (primarily wife and mother) constantly
belittled him, telling him that he was a wash-up, and
that he didn't have any ability in his job anymore.
This may have caused him to feel very
upset, and could have ultimately led to his decision to
commit what seemed to be a crime of passion. The co-worker
also went on to add that this was usually Bishop's way
to "put someone in their place", as he liked to say
himself.
Aftermath
Bishop had approximately one week of
advance time before the authorities even began looking
for him and could have traveled on his U.S. diplomatic
passport. Because of the methods of air travel and
immigration in 1976 throughout much of the world, he
could easily have avoided leaving a paper trail of any
kind.
Since 1976 Bishop has been allegedly
sighted numerous times in Belgium, England, Finland, the
Netherlands, Germany, Greece, Italy, Spain, Sweden and
Switzerland. The three sightings noted by the United
States Marshals Service are as follows:
Alternate theories that Bishop died
or committed suicide in the Great Smoky Mountains
National Park or that he had defected to the Soviet
Union are not seen as credible by the police.
In the
media
After the initial national headlines,
the Bishop case has been the subject of articles in
national publications like Reader's Digest and
Time Magazine at milestone anniversaries.
It has been followed intermittently
on an ad hoc basis by the Washington Post, the
Washington Star, and the Washington Times as
well as local Washington D.C. television stations. The
case has also been featured on television shows such as
Unsolved Mysteries, ABC's Vanished and
America's Most Wanted.
Wikipedia.org
Where Is Brad Bishop?
30 Years Later, Md. Murder Suspect's Flight Still a
Puzzle
By Paul Duggan
- Washington Post Staff WriterThursday, March 2, 2006
Surely he's dead,
right?
A lot of people think so.
All these years after Brad Bishop,
a State Department Foreign Service officer,
allegedly bludgeoned his mother, his wife and his
three young sons in their Bethesda home and burned
their bodies -- all these years after a Maryland
grand jury indicted the missing diplomat on five
counts of murder in one of the most baffling cases
in the annals of local crime -- he couldn't still be
out there, hiding under a phony name, living quietly
on the lam. . . .
Could he?
A lot of people think so.
Who knows, really?
"Until I can prove he's dead,"
said Montgomery County Sheriff Raymond M. Kight, "I'm
going to assume he's alive."
A bright-green arrest warrant
folder bearing his name -- "Bishop, William Bradford
Jr." -- contains the oldest of nearly 2,000 open
cases (alleged traffic scofflaws, deadbeat dads,
rapists, drug dealers and killers) in the files of
the fugitive squad at the sheriff's office, in
Rockville. Generations of deputies have been on the
lookout for him since Gerald R. Ford was in the
White House. Decades have gone by. And the Bishop
warrant sits on a shelf.
Where did he go?
Why did it happen?
That distant March.
Thirty years ago this week.
In the modern, digital, hyper-vigilant
world of surveillance cameras and watch lists, high-speed
computer networks and satellite monitoring, sneaking
out of the country is a lot more difficult than it
used to be. In 1976, Kight said, it wouldn't have
been hard at all, if that is what Bishop did.
"Back in those days," he said, "people
would buy a plane ticket, then they couldn't make
the flight, they'd give it to someone else. And then
that person would fly under the other person's name."
Kight was a police officer for
five years before joining the sheriff's office in
1967 and was a lieutenant in the fugitive squad when
the Bishop warrant came in. The mystery of the
vanished diplomat has weighed on him for three
decades.
Bishop, 39, a Yale University
graduate, a former Army intelligence officer and a
suave dinner guest fluent in five languages, told
his secretary that he wasn't feeling well March 1
and left work early. On the drive from Foggy Bottom
to Bethesda, he stopped at a Sears and bought a
malletlike metal hammer and a gas can, which he
filled at a Texaco.
He used the hammer on his wife
first, police said. She was 37. His 68-year-old
mother was killed next, when she came in from
walking the dog. Then he allegedly bludgeoned the
boys, ages 5 to 14, as they slept.
He drove 275 miles overnight in
his Chevy station wagon, police said, to swampy
woods in Tyrrell County, N.C., where he piled the
bodies in a bathtub-size hole, doused them with
gasoline and set them on fire. He stopped at a
sporting goods store in Columbia, N.C., that day,
March 2. And on March 18, his car was found
abandoned at a campground near the Tennessee-North
Carolina border, in the Great Smoky Mountains
National Park.
Did he wander into the forest,
out of his mind, and die? By accident? By his own
hand?
Then bears and wild boars
devoured his remains.
That's one theory.
Yet no trace of him turned up in
extensive searches -- no bones, no scraps of
clothing.
So maybe . . .
"A new life, a new name, over in
Europe," Kight said, sitting in his office recently.
He shrugged. "I'm not ruling it out."
With proper planning and
discipline, the sheriff said, it's possible to
assume a false identify and hide in plain sight
indefinitely.
It's no secret, Kight said. "There
are plenty of books out there on how to do it. Look
in the paper at the obituaries; find someone near
your date of birth. Go in and get their birth
certificate. Get their Social Security number."
Since the Sept. 11, 2001,
terrorist attacks, obtaining false identification
has become more difficult. Laws and procedures have
been tightened. "But there are still ways for
someone with a devious mind to do it," Kight said.
Then it's just a matter of living quietly under the
radar, avoiding background checks and contact with
police.
Consider John E. List:
His wife, his mother and his
three children were shot to death in their New
Jersey home in 1971 -- and List (like Bishop five
years later) was nowhere to be found. With an
assumed Social Security number and a driver's
license in the name of Robert P. Clark, List
remarried and lived for nearly two decades in
Colorado and a Richmond suburb, where he was working
as an accountant in 1989.
He was arrested that year, and
later sentenced to life in prison, only after an
acquaintance saw him profiled on the TV show "America's
Most Wanted."
And reputed Boston crime boss
James J. "Whitey" Bulger:
No alleged gangster in the city
was more notorious than Bulger, a household name in
Irish South Boston, where he reigned for decades.
But in 1995, after learning he had been indicted, he
managed to disappear with hardly a trace because of
years of careful planning, investigators have said.
Eleven years later, he remains in the wind, a
fugitive from racketeering charges and 18 counts of
murder.
Bishop had the advantage of being
an experienced international traveler, fluent in
Italian, Spanish, French and Croatian. He had served
tours at embassies in Italy, Ethiopia and Botswana.
He had military intelligence training. He understood
the arcane ins and outs of overseas immigration
bureaucracies. With his know-how, Kight said, Bishop
could easily have melted into a foreign society
under layers of false paperwork.
Long before the killings, for
example, "he could have issued himself numerous
passports in any number of different names, and we'd
never know."
Plus, if his plan was to flee the
country, he had a head start. The burned bodies
weren't identified, and Bishop wasn't missed, until
a week after the slayings.
Why the slayings occurred is
anyone's guess. As far as investigators could tell,
nothing had been terribly amiss in the family -- no
dire financial woes or major job worries, no
extramarital affairs or serious mental problems.
Thirty years later, the sheriff said, Bishop remains
an enigma. "I don't think I know him at all."
Was he a spy? Was the Foreign
Service career just a cover?
The State Department has said no.
So has the CIA.
"I do," said Kight, 65, a barrel-chested
lawman who was first elected sheriff in 1986. "It's
my cop's suspicious mind."
The only money Bishop was known
to have when he vanished was $400 that he took out
of a bank hours before the killings.
"But he could go to work," Kight
said. "He could get a job. He could be doing that
now."
Police handled the murder
investigation, but tracking the fugitive is the
sheriff's responsibility. His investigative files --
big binders labeled "Interpol" and "State Department,"
"North Carolina" and "Sightings, William Bradford
Bishop Jr., 1992-96" -- are stacked on shelves by
his desk.
"This never leaves me," Kight
said. "Every day, I hope I'll get a call or a letter
or a lead from somewhere, and it'll finally be valid."
For fugitive hunters, the world
is a lot smaller today than it was in 1976, before
advanced computer systems allowed for rapid
information-sharing among far-flung law enforcement
agencies. Kight's office, in searching for Bishop,
has tried to take advantage of the technology, to no
avail.
In 2002, said Kight's chief
deputy, Darren Popkin, "we thought by now there'd be
a good database of unidentified bodies" from North
Carolina to Pennsylvania -- and there was. "We
checked them all and narrowed it down to three
bodies," Popkin said. Dental records showed none was
Bishop.
There have been hundreds of
reported sightings over the years, but only three by
people acquainted with the missing diplomat.
A Swedish woman who said she had
socialized with him in Ethiopia said she saw him in
a public park in Stockholm in 1978. A former State
Department colleague said he saw Bishop in a
restroom in Sorrento, Italy, in 1979. A long-ago
Bethesda neighbor said she saw him at a train
station is Basel, Switzerland, in 1994. The reports
led authorities straight to dead ends.
About all Kight's deputies can do
now is wait for tips, look into them and
occasionally check data-mining services for some
hint that Bishop is out there.
"McAllen, Texas," the sheriff
said, recalling one such lead. "Someone sent in a
photo, said this man is very secretive. He was
dating the person's daughter. And he looked like
Bishop. So we hopped a plane, went down there,
pulled the guy off the street. Turned out he was
wanted in two other states. But it wasn't Bishop."
Who's dead now.
Or is 69.
"It's still open," Kight said. "It's
still a good warrant."
William
Bradford Bishop, Jr.
On vacation
in Europe, a woman from Bethesda,
Md., was waiting on the platform
of the railway station in Basel,
Switzerland. A well-groomed man
in the train opposite opened a
window on his car. The woman had
a sudden shock of recognition.
"I know that face," she said to
herself. But before she could
alert anyone, the train pulled
out of the station on that day
in September 1994. He was her
former neighbour -- and a
fugitive from an arrest warrant
for murder.
William
Bradford Bishop, Jr., had been a
winner all his life, a top
student and quarterback in high
school, educated at an Ivy
League college. Failure was
unheard of -- but that was what
he faced in early March 1976.
The hard-driving, ambitious U.S.
State Department diplomat had
worked tirelessly in hopes of
being elevated in the foreign
affairs bureaucracy. Then he
learned he'd been passed over
for promotion. One day soon
after, he complained of feeling
sick and left his office.
On March 8,
when a puzzled neighbour
wondered about the family's
absence, Montgomery County
police officers visited the
Bishops' colonial-style Bethesda
home. The front door wasn't
locked. In the foyer, study and
bedrooms, the walls and carpets
were spattered with blood.
Within hours
investigators were reading
reports about five badly charred
bodies discovered in a shallow
grave in a North Carolina park.
Each had suffered multiple blows
to the head with a blunt
instrument. Nearby was a long-handled
shovel bearing a label from a
Bethesda hardware store.
Dental
records identified the bodies as
Bishop's wife, Annette, his
mother, Lobelia, and his three
sons: 14-year-old William, ten-year-old
Brenton and five-year-old
Geoffrey. Pathologists reported
that the three boys were killed
with a sledgehammer, placed in a
shallow grave and set ablaze in
their pyjamas.
A grand jury
indicted Bishop on multiple
murder counts. With a diplomatic
passport, however, he had a two-week
head start. The suspect's motive
is a mystery, but he'd been
treated by a psychiatrist and
was reportedly dependent on an
antidepressant.
Now 63,
Bishop has been allegedly
sighted numerous times: in
Belgium, England, Finland,
Germany, Greece, Italy, Spain,
Sweden and, most recently,
Switzerland. Authorities are
convinced that he won't elude
justice forever. "The world is a
much smaller place now," says
Deputy Sheriff Robert L. Keefer,
who has worked the case for more
than ten years. "We'll catch up
with him."
ReadersDigest.ca
William Bradford Bishop, JR
is wanted for the March 1, 1976 brutal murders of
his entire family. The five victims are: his wife,
Annette Kathryn Bishop; his three sons, William
Bradford Bishop III, 14; Brenton Germain Bishop, 10;
Geoffery Corder Bishop, 5; and his mother, Lobelia
Amaryllis Bishop, 68.
Description:
Bishop is a white male. When last seen in 1976, he was 6'1", 180 pounds, with brown hair, brown eyes and a medium complexion and build.
Alias Names:
Bradford Bishop, Brad Bishop, Bradford Bishop Jr.
Date Of Birth: August 1,
1936
Social Security Number:
556-48-3489
Languages Spoken Fluently:
English, Spanish, French, Serbo-Croation, Italian
Education:
Bachelor of Science, History, Yale University; Master of Arts, International Studies Africa; University of California: Middlebury College, Middlebury, Vermont; University of Florence, Florence Italy.
Last Employer:
United States Department of State as an Assistant Chief, Division of Special Activities and Commercial Treaties
Places Stationed or Lived:
United States: California; South Pasadena, Monterey and Truckee Maryland: Baltimore and Bethesda; Vermont, Middlebury Connecticut: New Haven; Washington DC Europe: Italy: Verona, Florence and Milan Africa: Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, Gaborone and Botswana
Sports and Interest:
Tennis, swimming, camping, fishing, skiing, motorcycle riding and flying.
Last Sightings:
"Verified" sighting - March 2, 1976 in Jacksonville, North Carolina
Stockholm, Sweden - July 1978 - Seen by acquaintance
of Bishop family
Sorrento, Italy - January 1979 - Seen by co-worker at the State Department Basel, Switzerland - September 1994 - Seen by neighbor who knew Bishop and family in Bethesda, MD
Caution:
William Bradford Bishop is considered dangerous: The MONTGOMERY COUNTY STATES ATTORNEY'S OFFICE has authorized extradition of Bishop anywhere he is arrested.
Anyone with information regarding
WILLIAM BRADFORD BISHOP or his whereabouts, please
call the Montgomery County Sheriff's Office at
240-777-7022, your local Interpol Office, or your
local police department.
22nd anniversary of Bishop
murder mystery
Jimmy Fleming's -
The Tyrrel County
"Enquirer"
March 1998
The month of March marks a very
dubious anniversary in Tyrrell County.
On March 2, 1976, smoke was
detected by the Scotia Fire Tower and Ronald
Brickhouse, Forest Ranger, was sent to investigate.
The site of the smoke was only one mile west of the
tower, so it didn't take long for Ronald to reach
the location.
When he arrived, he saw a pile of
dirt and two smoldering bodies lying in a freshly
dug hole. He radioed for help and so began one of
the longest running unsolved mysteries in the United
States.
When law officers arrived to
investigate the crime scene they discovered the
bodies of two adult females, three juvenile males, a
gas can, a shovel, and a old pitchfork. The bodies
were sent to Chapel Hill, NC for identification and
Sheriff Royce Rhodes called in the SBI for
assistance with the case.
The SBI set up a mobile command
post in front of the Tyrrell County Courthouse in
Columbia to assist the fifteen agents that were sent
to investigate the case.
Five days into the case and the
bodies had not even been identified, until March 6th
when Detective Joe Sargent discovered a terrible
murder scene in a Carderock, Maryland home.
At that time, the bodies were
identified as Lobellia Bishop (age 68), Annette Weis
Bishop (age 37), William Bradford Bishop III (age
14), Brenton G. Bishop (age 10), and Geoffrey Bishop
(age 5).
It was reported that all the
victims were murdered while they slept in their home
and died due to massive head injuries inflicted with
a blunt instrument.
William Bradford Bishop, age 39,
(Lobellia's son, Annette's husband, and father to
the three boys) was missing along with the family's
dog and maroon 1974 Chevrolet Malibu station wagon.
Brad Bishop became the prime
suspect in the murder of his family and a murder
warrant was issued for his arrest on March 12, 1976.
Evidence linking him to the crime
was: withdrawal of savings on March 1st, his bloody
fingerprints inside the home, and his signature on a
credit card receipt from a purchase of tennis shoes
in Jacksonville, NC on the day the bodies were
discovered.
A man matching his description
was spotted in Jacksonville and Wilmington, NC
buying gas and dining hours after the burning bodies
were discovered. His 1974 Chevy was discovered on
March 18th abandoned at a campsite in the Great
Smoky Mountains near Gatlinburg, TN.
The car contained a bloody
blanket, ax, shotgun, bed clothing, dog biscuits,
and two capsules of a depressant drug called Serax.
The spare tire well was filled with blood from where
the five bodies were hauled from Maryland to Tyrrell
County, NC.
The nationwide manhunt for
Bradford Bishop who had a two week head start on
authorities has been stalled ever since this point.
Brad Bishop, assistant chief of the special trade
activities office of the State Department's economic
and business section has never been apprehended to
stand trial for the murder of his mother, wife, and
three sons.
It has been theorized that Bishop
killed himself in the rugged mountains where his car
was found or used his world-travel background and
fluency in several languages to flee the country and
lose himself abroad.
The Bradford Bishop case has been
written about in such publications as True Story,
Inside Detective, Reader's Digest, The Washington
Post, The Washington Star, The News and Observer,
and Time Magazine.
It has also been featured on
television shows such as Unsolved Mysteries and
America's Most Wanted. A screenplay, "Bradford
Bishop, Where Are You?" and a song "The Ballad Of
Brad Bishop" have been written about the crime.
Over the past 22 years there have
been many unconfirmed sightings of Bradford Bishop
in such places as the Netherlands, Sweden, and Italy.
The question is: "Will we ever know why Brad Bishop
murdered his family and how he came to choose an out
of the way logging road in Tyrrell County, North
Carolina to bury and burn their remains"?
William Bradford Bishop Jr.
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