Ga. Hiker Murder Linked To N.C. Case
Gary Hilton Charged In Meredith Emerson's Death; Evidence He May Have Also Killed N.C. Hiker
-
-
Gary Michael Hilton, left, talks to to his public defender Neil Smith, right, following a first appearance in Union County Magistrate Court in Blairsville, Ga. on Monday, Jan. 7, 2008. (AP Photo)
-
Georgia Bureau of Investigation Special Agent John Cagle speaks during a news conference in Dawsonville, Ga., Monday, Jan. 7, 2007. A drifter charged with kidnapping the 24-year-old hiker led authorities the body of Meredith Emerson Monday in the mountains of northern Georgia, investigators said, hours after a judge denied him bond in her New Year's Day disappearance. (AP/Gainesville Time, T. Reed)
-
In this May 2007 photo released by Pat B. Mitchell, Meredith Emerson is seen with her dog Ella, in Flowery Branch, Ga. Authorities found her body Monday, Jan. 7, 2008. (AP/Courtesy of Pat B. Mitchell)
-
-
Play CBS Video Video Hope Fades For Missing Hiker A suspect has been arrested in the disappearance of 24-year-old hiker Meredith Emerson in Georgia. Maggie Rodriguez reports and then speaks with Emerson's boyfriend Steve Segars.
-
Interactive Crime Beat Statistics and specifics on crime in America.
Gary Michael Hilton has been charged in the beating death and decapitation of 24-year-old Meredith Emerson, whose body police found Jan. 7 in a Georgia state forest with Hilton's help.
Transylvania County Sheriff David Mahoney said detectives have now linked Hilton to the slaying of 84-year-old Irene Bryant and disappearance of her 80-year-old husband John Bryant in the North Carolina woods. Mahoney declined to say how investigators linked Hilton to the case.
The Georgia Bureau of Investigation is asking for help in finding an abandoned white van that belonged to Hilton.
GBI spokesman John Bankhead said the white Chevrolet Astro van was discovered by a hunter about a month ago on U.S. Forest Service land in White County in the mountains of northwest Georgia, reports CBS News affiliate WGCL-TV in Atlanta.
Bankhead said someone has towed the vehicle away since then, and authorities want access to it as part of an investigation into the brutal Jan. 4 death of Meredith Emerson.
The vehicle is not the same white van Hilton was driving when he was arrested Jan. 6 for Emerson's killing, reports WGCL-TV.
Hilton's attorney in the Georgia case, Neil A. Smith, said last week that the case involved "significant mental health issues." Hilton is being held without bail.
Searchers found Irene Bryant's body Nov. 9. She and her husband had been missing since Oct. 21, when they left for a hike in the Pisgah National Forest. Like Emerson, Irene Bryant died of a blow to the head and her body was found near a hiking trail.
Authorities believe John Bryant may have been kidnapped to provide a security code for the couple's bank account. Someone withdrew $300 from their account at an ATM the day after they went hiking.
The transaction took place in Ducktown, Tenn., about 50 miles from the area of the Georgia investigation. Authorities say Hilton tried to use Emerson's credit card after her disappearance during a New Year's Day hike.
The license plate found on the van Hilton was driving when he was arrested was stolen from a disabled car in Transylvania County, N.C., Mahoney said. The owner didn't notice the plates were missing until after learning of Hilton's arrest in the Emerson case.
The North Carolina Bureau of Investigation is also looking into whether Hilton could be linked to the disappearance of Rossana Miliani, 26, who was last seen Dec. 7, 2005, and had told her family she was going hiking.
A store clerk said Miliani came into her store with a white man in his 60s and seemed nervous when they bought a backpack, said private investigator Steve Siske.
Hilton has also been named a suspect in the death of Cheryl Hodges Dunlap, whose decapitated body was found in Florida's Apalachicola National Forest on Dec. 15.
© MVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- This is deffinately going to get the right to lifers out and screaming. We all have our opinions, however, I do not believe this person - G.M.Hilton show be allowed jail time. He should be put to death so he is not a waste on tax payers money living in a jail cell waiting for parole. What he did was absolutely horrible and disgraceful. And he is showing no remorse for his actions. I too wonder how many victims have fallen prey to this monster.
- Reply to this comment
- Very creepy, why do I feel like we are going to hear allot more about this dude?
- Reply to this comment
- I would agree with you on that crzmeat, sounds like a well seasoned killer to me. He knows his craft quite well. Wonder if they could look up past disappearences in the past forty or fifty years and see what would match up to his whereabouts, this human monster could prove very interesting.
- Reply to this comment
- This has the foul smell of a serial killer...I hate torture but this is a case were I would approve waterboarding he''s a mad dog and his hunting ground was hiking trails. He''s 61 none it twice maybe 3 times I''m sure theres more he knows he''ll die prison but I have a dreadfull feeling this killer has many victums and we are only scratching the surface. Any opinions?
- Reply to this comment




