Murderpedia has thousands of hours of work behind it. To keep creating
new content, we kindly appreciate any donation you can give to help
the Murderpedia project stay alive. We have many
plans and enthusiasm
to keep expanding and making Murderpedia a better site, but we really
need your help for this. Thank you very much in advance.
Richard Paul
WHITE
Classification:
Serial killer
Characteristics:
Rape - Torture
Number of victims: 3 - 6
Date of murders: 2001 - 2003
Date
of arrest:
September 9,
2003
Date of birth: 1973
Victims profile:Annaletia
Maria Gonzales, 27, and Victoria Lyn Turpin, 32 / Jason Reichardt,
27 (former
co-worker)
Method of murder: Strangulation - Shooting
Location: Denver, Colorado, USA
Status:
Sentenced to three life sentences in prison without parole +
144 years for raping and torturing three of his surviving victims
in November 2003
Richard Paul White admitted strangling a woman three years ago and led
police to her grave in southern Colorado. Relatives now must deal with
her children's pain.
It's
too soon for the little boy to talk about losing his mom, so he pounds a
basketball instead.
His
younger sister is the one with all the questions about why a serial
killer named Richard Paul White took the life of her mother, 25-year-old
Torrey Marie Foster.
"She
says her mom wasn't a bad person, so why did he do that to her?"
recalled Della Cardoza, 61, Foster's grandmother, who is caring for the
children. "I don't have an answer."
Denver police confirmed Tuesday what Cardoza said the family has known
since Saturday: A skeleton found last year near Mesita in southern
Colorado was that of Foster, an outgoing woman who was studying
cosmetology with hopes of a new life.
White
helped authorities find Foster's body as part of an agreement in which
he pleaded guilty to the murders of two women found buried in the
backyard of his former Denver home.
White
told investigators how he strangled a woman in 2002 after picking her up
at a bus stop near Colfax Avenue in Denver. He helped them locate the
remains near his father's home in Mesita near the New Mexico border in
September 2004.
But
the victim's identity was a mystery until the Denver District Attorney's
Office released a sketch that was recognized by Denver homicide
Detective Jon Priest, who remembered Foster as a witness in one of his
cases.
The
District Attorney's Office then used DNA from Foster's 9-year-old
daughter to confirm the woman's identity, spokeswoman Lynn Kimbrough
said.
After
being told what happened to their mother, Foster's daughter and her 11-
year-old son did not want to start school in Denver this week, Cardoza
said. She urged them to go in order to have some sense of normalcy.
"He's
pretty quiet," she said of the boy. "He plays basketball. I figure he's
using it as a weapon, just playing and playing and playing."
The
little girl, she said, is inconsolable.
"She wants her mommy. She doesn't want to stay with me forever," she
said.
Cardoza worries for both children, whom Foster entrusted to her care
while in cosmetology school.
"She
used to live with me, most of the time," Cardoza said of her
granddaughter. "She was married, and then he left. So she tried to get
it together again."
After
his capture in September 2003, White told officers how in January 2002
he picked up a tall, "dark-skinned" woman who was blind in her right eye
and drove her to his house at 2885 Albion St., where he strangled her.
White said he knew he was fated to kill her because he had a tattoo of a
similar woman.
White, now 32, described the woman in detail. He said the tall, thin
woman had just gotten her dark, crimped hair done; had perfect teeth;
had a bad scar on her forearm; and had children.
In
November 2003, White was sentenced to life in prison for strangling
Annaletia Maria Gonzales, 27, and Victoria Lyn Tur pin, 32, whose bodies
were found in his former backyard.
Because of the deal with prosecutors, which included his help in
locating Foster's remains, White will not be charged with her death,
Kimbrough said.
He
received an additional 144 years for raping and torturing three of his
surviving victims.
Victim Of
Colorado Serial Killer Identified
August 16, 2005
DENVER - Human skeletal remains found at a site where
convicted serial killer Richard Paul White led police last fall have
been identified as those of a 25-year-old mother, police said today.
The family of Torrey Marie Foster knew for some time
the remains could be hers, police spokeswoman Detective Virginia Lopez
said.
She said Foster left behind an 11-year-old boy and a
9-year-old girl. Lopez did not know where Foster was from.
White, 32, is serving three life terms for killing
two women whose bodies were buried in a Denver back yard, Victoria Lyn
Turpin, 32, and Annaletia Maria Gonzales, 27, and for killing his former
roommate, Jason Reichardt, 27.
White was spared the death penalty by pleading guilty
to the killings and cooperating with investigators.
He had told authorities he killed five women and
buried their bodies around the state. Last fall, he led authorities to
sites in Costilla and Otero counties. Foster's remains were found at one
of those sites, near Mesita. White said he had picked her up at a bus
stop and killed her.
The remains were identified with DNA extracted from
the bones, Lopez said.
It was unclear whether White would be charged with
Foster's killing. Lynn Kimbrough, spokeswoman for the district attorney,
did not immediately return a call.
Serial
killer given third life sentence
December 28, 2004
Before issuing another life sentence to Richard Paul White, a judge
wanted the serial killer to know what he thought about his claim that
killing his buddy was accidental.
"I am
familiar with guns," Judge Gerald Rafferty said. "I have never heard of
anyone pointing a gun at someone and pulling the trigger to demonstrate
the safety was on."
Rafferty also made it clear at White's sentencing hearing Thursday that
his third life sentence - this one for fatally shooting Jason Reichardt,
27, on Sept. 7, 2003 - was extraordinary..."I think it is fair to note
that a great deal of mercy has been displayed to you," Rafferty said...White,
who pleaded guilty to killing Reichardt in a deal in which he avoided
the death penalty, declined to speak about Reichardt, who helped him get
a job..."I don't wish to say anything," he said.
On
Monday, White was sentenced to life in prison for strangling Annaletia
Maria Gonzales, 27, and Victoria Lyn Turpin, 32, whose bodies were
exhumed from the backyard of his former Denver home at 2885 Albion St.
Another 144 years were tacked on to his sentence for raping and
torturing three of his surviving victims.
Reichardt's father, Bill, stood at the prosecutor's table flanked by his
son and wife, and said that White was not his son's friend, only one of
the many people Jason helped.
"His
kindness cost him his life," Reichardt said. "A day does not go by that
we do not miss him.
Serial killer White
sentenced
November 30, 2004
Murderer mouths words
'I'm sorry' to slain women's kin..Family members of two women murdered
by serial killer Richard White looked him straight in the eye and sobbed
as they spoke at his sentencing hearing Monday in Denver District Court.
"I wish some day I could
hear a reason or answer for how someone could do something so cruel to
another human being," said Effie Laub, whose sister was raped, tortured
and killed...Family members told White about the children left behind
when he killed their mothers in 2002...White stared back, nodded and
mouthed the words "I'm sorry."
He made no other
statement as he was sentenced to two life prison terms for the murders
of Annaletia Maria Gonzales, 27, and Victoria Turpin, 34, whose bodies
were buried in his back yard.
He also was sentenced to
144 years in prison for sexual assaults on three other women who
survived.
"Mr. White will not see
the light of day as a free man ever again," said Denver District Judge
R. Michael Mullins.
White taunted women he
brought to his home at 2885 Albion St., telling them about the bodies
buried in his back yard and warning the women that they were likely to
end up there, too, said prosecutor Kerri Lombardi.
"He has terrorized
countless other women," Lombardi said.
"Richard White is a
predator," she said. "He made a sport of hunting for, raping, torturing
and killing these women, who spent hours and days begging for their
lives. He enjoyed this game of human torture he created."
White stuck the barrel
of a gun in their mouths and threatened to shoot them during the rapes,
Lombardi said. After hours of torture, he used cords or belts to
strangle them.
White claims to have
killed three other prostitutes he picked up on Colfax Avenue.
He also has admitted
killing his friend, Jason Reichardt, and faces another life sentence for
that murder in Arapahoe County. He confessed to the other murders after
he was arrested in Reichardt's slaying in September 2003.
White pleaded guilty in
September to avoid facing the death penalty and agreed to help
authorities find his other victims.
The remains of one of
them was found Sept. 28 in Costilla County. The remains have not been
identified but White described the victim as dark-skinned, tall, slender
and blind in her right eye. He said she was staying at a motel on East
Colfax Avenue at the end of January 2002 when he picked her up,
according to Lynn Kimbrough, spokesperson for the district attorney.
White said he picked up
two other victims in Aurora and dumped their bodies in a river near La
Junta in Otero County. Those bodies have not been recovered.
Defense attorney
Sharlene Reynolds said White is psychotic and suffered for years from
untreated mental illness. She said he is the victim of "horrendous"
childhood abuse.
At times, she said, he
wanted the death penalty.
"He just couldn't deal
with the magnitude of what he had done to these victims and their
families," she said.
White's father
apologized for his son.
"The English language
does not contain the words to express the sorrow we feel," he said. "I
know how horrified and remorseful he is. My son's not sane. I love him
more than I can say but when these things happened he was delusional. He
believed things that were not true."
After the sentencing
hearing, Turpin's sister, Destiny Martinez, was not moved by the
apology.
"There is not enough
mental illness in the world to make someone do something like that," she
said.
Authorities seek help
identifying remains.
Serial
killer guides CBI to remains
September 29, 2004
Authorities on Tuesday
uncovered what may be human remains with the help of professed serial
killer Richard Paul White, who led detectives here in search of one of
the women he said he killed.
Costilla County Sheriff
Roger Benton confirmed Tuesday that White and Colorado Bureau of
Investigation officials searched for the body.
According to Paula
Woodward of 9News, investigators found remains they believe are human.
The skeletal remains were being sent to a pathologist for analysis.
A C-shaped hole in the
ground was dug about 3 miles north of the tiny southern Colorado town of
Mesita in Costilla County, where White lived in his youth.
Benton said White was
kept in a van with tinted windows while deputies formed a line and
searched the sagebrush- covered ground.
"They were walking in a
straight line, and when they got to a certain point, they walked in a
circle," Benton said. "It seemed like they were close to something."
Last year, Benton and
his deputies searched for about five days for a body White said he
buried there, but they came up empty.
Denver prosecutors said
this month that they won't seek the death penalty against White for
strangling two women after he agreed to help find the bodies of three
other women he says he killed.
White pleaded guilty in
Denver District Court on Sept. 16 to the murders of Victoria Lyn Turpin,
32, and Annaletia Maria Gonzales, 27, whose bodies were exhumed from the
backyard of White's former home at 2885 Albion St.
He also pleaded guilty
to using a weapon to sexually assault three other women that the
31-year-old White said were prostitutes.
Twenty-eight felony
counts against White were dismissed as part of the deal.
Prosecutors in Costilla
and Otero counties also agreed not to seek the death penalty against
White.
White entered a plea
deal this month in Arapahoe County in which he will receive life in
prison without parole for the Sept. 7, 2003, shooting death of co-worker
Jason Reichardt, 27.
Two days after killing
Reichardt, White was arrested by a Douglas County SWAT team. While
confessing to Reichardt's death, White told investigators about the five
women he said he killed. A Denver grand jury indicted him on 33 felony
counts in May.
Following Tuesday's
activity, White was apparently returned to Arapahoe County.
He also said he dumped
the bodies of two woman near La Junta in Otero County. It was not known
when White would travel there to help investigators find those bodies.
Serial killer won't face
death
September 17, 2004
White, who agreed to
help locate bodies of 3 women, faces life term. Richard White is
escorted to court on Thursday, where he pleaded guilty to killing two
women whose bodies were dug up at his former Denver residence.
Denver prosecutors won't
seek the death penalty against Richard Paul White for strangling two
women after the professed serial killer agreed to help find the bodies
of three other women he says he killed.
White pleaded guilty in
Denver District Court on Thursday to the deaths of Victoria Lyn Turpin,
32, and Annaletia Maria Gonzales, 27, who were exhumed from the backyard
of White's former house at 2885 Albion St.
He also pleaded guilty
to using a weapon to sexually assault three other women that the 31-
year-old White said were prostitutes.
Twenty-eight felony
counts against White were dismissed as part of the deal in which he will
get life in prison without parole.
Prosecutors in Costilla
and Otero counties also agreed not to seek the death penalty against
White, who will direct them to where he said he dumped bodies in those
counties.
Denver District Attorney
Bill Ritter said he believed mitigating factors outweighed aggravating
factors in the case, making it tough to convince a jury that White
deserved the death penalty.
"He had a childhood
riddled with sexual and physical abuse," Ritter said, adding that
authorities wouldn't have even known about the other murders had White
not confessed to them.
But at least one expert
says not seeking the death penalty in a serial-killer case could hamper
efforts to get the death penalty in future, less egregious murder cases.
"When you are just
hunting people and killing them, it's hard to imagine anything worse,"
said Seattle attorney Todd Maybrown.
The Denver plea deal is
similar to one cut in 2003 with Green River slayer Gary Ridgway, who was
given life sentences in exchange for helping authorities find numerous
bodies of women he murdered near Seattle. Ridgway pleaded guilty to
killing 48 women.
That decision already
has had repercussions in death- penalty cases in Washington state.
Maybrown filed an appeal
for death-row inmate Dayva Cross, who killed his wife and two
stepdaughters in Snoqualmie, Wash., saying that although his acts were
horrible, they were not as bad as Ridgway's three-decade reign of
terror.
Under Washington state
law, courts must compare death- sentence cases to determine if one
outcome is too harsh compared with similar cases, Maybrown said.
But Assistant Adams
County District Attorney Steve Bernard said Colorado doesn't have such a
law.
The Colorado Supreme
Court ruled in 1990 in the death-sentence case of Gary Davis - who
kidnapped, raped and killed a woman - that it also doesn't need such a
standard, Bernard said.
Colorado's
proportionality rule only weighs whether facts of a case prove there are
enough aggravating factors to warrant the death penalty, he said.
In Davis' case there
were, Bernard said. Davis, put to death in 1997, was the last person
executed in Colorado, Bernard said.
Maybrown said even
though Colorado's proportionality rules are different, White's case will
be rehashed in future death-penalty cases.
"This prosecutor will
have to compare every case," he said.
Prosecutors will have to
explain why they would seek the death penalty in a robbery-homicide case
when it wasn't a serial killer case, Maybrown said.
White entered a plea
deal this month in Arapahoe County in which he will receive life in
prison without parole for the Sept. 7, 2003, shooting death of co-worker
Jason Reichardt, 27.
Two days after killing
Reichardt, White was arrested by a Douglas County SWAT team. While
confessing to Reichardt's death, White told investigators about the five
women he killed. A Denver grand jury indicted him on 33 felony counts in
May.
Kathleen Lord,
Colorado's chief appellate deputy who is part of a team of at least four
public defenders representing White, declined to comment.
Self-Professed Serial Killer Admits To 2 More Murders
September 16, 2004
Self-proclaimed serial
killer Richard Paul White appeared before a Denver district judge
Thursday morning and pleaded guilty to murdering two women and sexually
assaulting three others.
The bodies of the two
slain women were found buried in the back yard of a home in east Denver
last year, a home where White once lived.
As part of the plea
agreement, prosecutors will not seek the death penalty against White and
he will cooperate in the search for the bodies of three other women he
claims to have killed.
Prosecutors on the case
discussed the terms of the plea agreement with the family members of the
murder victims and the surviving sexual assault victims before
Thursday's hearing. The victims' families are expected to attend White's
sentencing on Nov. 29, 2004.
He faces mandatory life
in prison without parole on each of the two murder charges and faces 16
years to life in prison on each of the sexual assault charges.
This is the second plea
agreement White has made in as many weeks.
Last week, White pleaded
guilty to first-degree murder for the death of his friend Jason
Reichardt. White will be sentenced for that crime in Arapahoe County in
Dec. 2. As part of the plea agreement he will not face the death penalty
but will be sentenced to life in prison.
During his interrogation
for the Reichardt murder, White confessed to killing five prostitutes
and dumping their bodies. Two women -- Victoria Lyn Turpin, 32, and
Annaletia Maria Gonzales, 27 -- were found buried in the back yard of a
house in Park Hill. White claims to have dumped the other women around
the state but authorities in Otero and Costilla counties in southern
Colorado have not found evidence to support his claims.
Serial Killer pleaded
guilty
September 8, 2004
A professed serial
killer will spend the rest of his life in prison. Richard Paul White
pleaded guilty yesterday to first-degree murder in the shooting death of
his former roommate, 27-year-old Jason Reichardt of Aurora.
Investigators say White
told his sister he accidentally shot Reichardt last year while trying
to steal Reichardt's truck.
After his arrest, White
told authorities he had killed five women and buried their bodies. The
bodies of 32-year-old Lyn Turpin and 27-year-old Annaletia Maria
Gonzales were found last year, buried in the backyard of a Denver home.
White is scheduled to be
sentenced to life in prison without parole in December.
S
uspected
serial killer White gets life in one murder
September 7, 2004
Suspected serial killer
Richard Paul White pleaded guilty to first-degree murder in Arapahoe
County court today in connection with the death of one of his alleged
victims, Jason Reichardt of Aurora.
White will get a life
sentence without parole in exchange for pleading guilty to the murder of
Reichardt, 27, a former co-worker.
White still faces
charges in the killings of two women whose bodies were found buried in
the yard of a Park Hill home where White formerly lived, and in attacks
on three other women.
A Denver grand jury in
May returned a 53-count indictment against White, who had law
enforcement authorities across the state looking for bodies of his
alleged victims last September.
"We're looking at five
different women," district attorney's spokeswoman Lynn Kimbrough said in
May of the Denver indictment. "All five were kidnapped; all five were
sexually assaulted; all five were held against their will; two were
killed, and there is one victim of attempted murder."
White had confessed to
killing five women he said were prostitutes and dumping their bodies
throughout the state. The confession came during an interrogation by
Aurora police into the death of Reichardt.
Professed
Serial Killer Strikes Plea Bargain
September 7, 2004
Richard White To Spend
Life In Prison Without Possibility Of Parole. Self-proclaimed serial
killer Richard Paul White was back in court Tuesday morning to agree to
a plea bargain that will spare his life but guarantee that he will spend
the rest of it in prison.
White, 31, received the
life sentence without the possibility of parole in exchange for pleading
guilty to the first-degree murder of his best friend, Jason Reichardt.
The robbery and burglary charges against White were also dismissed as
part of the plea bargain, 7NEWS reported.
Nearly one year ago,
Reichardt was found in the upstairs bedroom of his Aurora home. He had
been shot in the head and his pickup truck had been stolen. Reichardt
befriended White when he was out of work and had tried to find him a
job.
During his interrogation
for the Reichardt murder, White confessed to killing five prostitutes
and dumping their bodies. Two women who were found buried in the back
yard of a house he used to occupy in Denver's Capitol Hill. White claims
to have dumped the other women around the state but authorities in Otero
and Costilla counties in southern Colorado have not found evidence to
support his claims.
White's official
sentencing for the Aurora murder is scheduled for Dec. 2 at 3:30 pm. The
case against him in Denver continues and is unaffected by Tuesday's plea
agreement.
The two women whose
bodies were unearthed in the back yard were identified as Victoria Lyn
Turpin, 32, and Annaletia Maria Gonzales, 27.
Facing 53
counts in prostitute slayings, attacks
June 22, 2004
Self-professed serial
killer Richard P. White was advised of a 53-count indictment against him
Monday. White, 31, is charged with first-degree murder in the killings
of two prostitutes and is accused of attacking three other women. White
has told police that he killed five prostitutes, but police so far have
not found evidence to support his claims.
On Monday, his defense
attorneys asked a judge to prevent detectives and investigators from
talking to him at the county jail...The indictment charges White with
murdering Annaletia Maria Gonzales (27) and Victoria Turpin (34). Their
remains were found buried in the yard of his Park Hill home Sept. 11
after White drew a map for detectives.
White is accused of
strangling both victims between Aug. 1, 2002 and Nov. 30, 2002.
The three other women
were also picked up on the street for sex at different times in 2002.
White strangled one of
them and threatened to kill all three, but they were able to escape, the
indictment said.
White will be arraigned
Aug. 9. He is charged with two counts of first-degree murder, six counts
of sex assault, eight counts of kidnapping and one count of attempted
first-degree murder, among other charges. White also faces a trial in
Arapahoe County in the Sept. 7 shooting death of co-worker Jason
Reichardt (27).
Accused
murderer also a serial killer?
May 20, 2004
A self-professed serial
killer was indicted Thursday on charges of kidnapping, sexually
assaulting and murdering two women whose bodies were found buried in the
back yard of a Denver house where he once lived.
Richard Paul White (31),
previously charged in another slaying, also was charged Thursday with
kidnapping and sexually assaulting three other women and trying to kill
one of them.
White was charged in
January with first-degree murder in the Sept. 7 shooting death of Jason
Reichardt (27) of Aurora. He has said that shooting was accidental.
While being questioned
in Reichardt death, White told police he had killed five prostitutes
across the state since 1998, buried two in his back yard and scattered
the bodies of the others in Costilla and Otero counties in southern
Colorado.
Police found the bodies
of Victoria Lynn Haskay (34) and Annaletia Maria Gonzales (27) in
September. No bodies have been found in Costilla or Otero county despite
extensive searches.
Gonzales was probably
strangled, police said. Little information has been released about
Haskay.
The 53-count indictment
against White includes first-degree felony murder, sexual assault,
kidnapping and other charges. He was being held in the Arapahoe County
Jail.