Seven Days of Rage: The Craigslist Killer
Explosive New Details; More Shocking Than the Crimes Is the Person Accused
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Play CBS Video Video Seven Days of Rage: The Craigslist Killer In Full: More shocking than the crimes is the person accused. Explosive new details.
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Video "Seven Days of Rage" "The Deadly Crime Spree of the Craigslist Killer" Explosive new details about the case in a new book from "48 Hours Mystery."
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Philip Markoff stands during his arraignment in Boston Municipal Court, Tuesday, April 21, 2009, in Boston. (AP Photo/Mark Garfinkel)
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Murder victim Julissa Brisman (Splash News)
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Las Vegas escort Trisha Leffler was robbed at gunpoint by a man she met through an ad placed on Craigslist. (CBS)
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Photo Essay Under Surveillance Hotel cameras capture glimpse of suspected "Craigslist Killer"
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Photo Essay The Craigslist Killing A Boston med student is accused of killing a woman who advertised as a masseuse on the popular Web site.
But then, on April 10, everything changed. The "Craigslist Killer" began his seven-day crime spree.
His first victim was a woman from Las Vegas who was fleeing that city’s crackdown on vice.
"I just picked a city and went to it. I've been doing it for the past two years," Leffler said of choosing Boston. Her line of work? "I was escorting."
In this case, a traveling escort. Trisha Leffler, 29, checked herself into the Westin Copley Place Hotel. No surprise, she went right to where the money is - the Back Bay area of the city, known for its fancy hotels, exclusive boutiques and hip restaurants.
When asked how much money she can make in this field, Tricia told "48 Hours Mystery" correspondent Peter Van Sant that being an escort is quite lucrative - she can make thousands of dollar a week.
Tricia said she immediately went online to Craigslist, the Web bulletin board, and placed an ad in the erotic services section. She said after submitting her ad with the headline "Sweet Blonde," she started getting phone calls right away.
"What Craigslist does is basically provide services and these prostitutes have been providing services for years. And if it’s not the Yellow Pages, it's gonna be Craigslist. They find a means to advertise their services," according to Joe Moura, a Boston-based private investigator and "48 Hours" consultant.
Moura said that by acting as her own boss, Tricia was increasing her risk.
"If there’s a street prostitute, she’s gonna have a pimp down the street or across the street on the corner who’s protecting her. Somebody using Craigslist getting a fancy hotel in Boston, she’s on her own."
But that April night, when Tricia saw the man who answered her ad, she said she felt perfectly safe. "He looked nice, he looked young. Good looking, obviously."
Once the door was closed, this good-looking young man pulled out a very dangerous-looking gun.
"I backed up a little bit. He just said, 'If you do everything you're asked, no harm's gonna come to you.' He said, 'Lay down, put your hands behind your back.' When he started to walk towards me, he put the gun back in his pocket."
The man put on some black leather gloves and took out some plastic zip ties.
In an exclusive interview with "48 Hours Mystery," Tricia explained, "He knelt down with one knee in between my legs. I’m thinking like what does he want? I’m shaking. I’m scared. It dawned on me later that he could have very well killed me."
Tricia's attacker wanted money. "I had about $800 in cash, he grabbed that, put that in his pocket," she said.
As he took her credit and debit cards, Tricia said he made no attempt to disguise his face. But he was intent on getting his phone number off her cell phone.
"Was he wearing his gloves when he did that?" Van Sant asked Tricia.
"No," she replied.
"Well, how dumb is that?"
"Dumb."
Dumb, and, as it turned out, he was more than a little weird.
He picked up a pair of Tricia's underwear from the floor and put them in his pocket. "If he would've looked at my face, it would've been, like, "What the hell are you doing?"
At that point, she explained, the gunman began walking around the hotel room looking for something.
"And he said, 'Come here.' And I went in to the bathroom and he basically tied me to the doorknob. I got really scared. He took a knife out of his pocket and cut the phone lines. He came back over to me and taped my mouth. He put three pieces of tape over my mouth."
Tricia noticed that he had yet to put the gloves back on, meaning that his fingerprints were all over that tape.
After he left the room, she quickly broke free from the zip ties, but worried that he may still be nearby.
"I'm worried he's listening through the door. I look out the peephole. There's nothing - there's nobody out there. I open the door very slowly, stuck my head out, looked both ways. Nobody was in the hallway. I crept down the hall to see if he was maybe standing by the elevator. [There's] nobody by the elevator.
"I’m still shaking. I’m still nervous," she continued. "So I went back to the room, grabbed my room key, shut the door and went and knocked on the next-door neighbor's door.'Can I call security? I've just been robbed at gunpoint.'"
From the start, Boston police took Tricia Leffler seriously.
"They didn’t say, 'You’re not supposed to be doing this' - anything like that. They were very respectful towards me. They wanted to catch the guy," she told Van Sant. "The next day, when I went down to the police station to look through some photos, they had a surveillance photo of the man that I described."
Stills taken from a hotel security camera were the first shots of the man who became known as the Craigslist Killer.
View Surveillance Photos
Van Sant asked Joe Moura, a private investigator, "Wasn’t he aware that there were security cameras that people could track him down if something did go wrong?"
"Sometimes, because there’s security cameras everywhere, it’s almost like they’re not there. He figured the crime was so bold, he was gonna walk out, she’s not reporting it, nobody’s gonna be checking video if he was here or not. He figures it’s a clear-cut case. He's outta here," Moura explained. "The thing about this young lady is that she did come forward and actually helped in the investigation."
Tricia remained in Boston, waiting for the police to release her cell phone. On April 15, they called. "We need to talk to you. It's really important," she recalled. "Five minutes later, [there's] a knock at the door. And then they handed me a photograph. And I said, 'Wow, this is a really good picture of him. Where did you get it from?' And they just stopped and looked at me and they were, like, 'Is that him?' I said, 'Yeah, this is him. Was this before he came up to my room?'
"They said, 'No, this is taking from a different hotel.' And they said.' He murdered another girl last night.'"
Produced by Paul LaRosa and Sarah Prior
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- I find it very interesting how they slow-played the investigation to make absolutely sure they got the right "fine looking young blond white male." Contrast that with Boston Police handling of crimes allegedly committed by minorities or the immediate arrest of the Prof. They had a picture of this guy and a profile they could have put on the News before the second victim was murdered.
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- I tend to agree with many that say it is not Craigslist's fault for this and he should not be called the Craigslist Killer. Internet Killer would be better. Who knows what other site he may/may not have used. But my comment is WHY when this is a STRAIGHT, HETEROSEXUAL, SEX CRIME, they have to sensationalize the story further by listing what gay men refer to each other as. The only reason i can figure is to promote hate for the gay community by incorrectly linking this STRAIGHT killer to the gay community. Here is the quote i refer to:
""Craigslist has a huge number of categories - M for T, men for trannies; T for M, trannies for men; rice queens, white guys who only like Asians; burritos, white guys who only like Latinos."
I'm sure there are some straight slang references they could have used instead. Boy that really pisses me off. - Reply to this comment
- This scumbag deserves no mercy. $110,000 in student loans? That's one way to support a gambling addiction! But when that money ran out, he resorted to stealing from those loose women on craigslist. Shame on those prostitutes! But that's no reason to kill one of them. What's even more appalling is the fact he pled not guilty with all of that evidence against him. Now we have to spend more money on him besides his student loans to convict him?
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- evil....
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- (he needs to stay in jail forever so he can't hurt anyone else)
No, He needs to be hung by the neck untill he's dead. The problem is our government is so incompetant it would probably hang two innocent people along with him before they got it right. I'm not sure just what the answer is in the long term here. Your damned if you do and damned if you don't - Reply to this comment
- May God Bless all those affected by this monster...he needs to stay in jail forever so he can't hurt anyone else.
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- I feel really bad for Carmen...the last part of this story really touch me. I am so sorry for your loss, and may God Bless You.
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- Markoff is not smart. Just because he did well in letters at school does not mean the guy is smart. I know people who have all kinds of degrees and have held jobs that would seem to denote their intelligence, but if you get to know them, you'd soon realize they aren't really smart. Many are so caught up in their own misplaced self-images of brillance that they are NOT living in the real world about anything. In reality these people have absolutely NO common sense, which I think is the case with Markoff. Folks, the dude is dumb!
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- At Geebo.com, you cannot offer any more guarantees of personal safety than Craig. If strangers meet up at a location outside your control, for any reason, something bad can happen. It just has not happened to Geebo yet.
My local newspaper made a decision to stop running ads for strip clubs. A year later, a fellow colleague of my was murdered when someone responded to his used car ad for sale. Blaming it on sex and lifestyle does not work. - Reply to this comment
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- Over the last few years, newspapers and television news stories across the country have been reporting stories about victims ? from theft to rape to murder ? whose only mistake was responding to a Craigslist ad. Note to Craig: telling us that most people are good, is not a sufficient answer. For years, law enforcement agencies have been fighting with Craigslist to clean up the obvious illegal activities on the site ? and Craigslist has repeatedly balked or stalled.
The word is spreading that Craigslist is a dangerous place to buy, sell, or look for a date. This is sad state of affairs in an era when technologies exist to ferret out much of the illegal activity, and good old fashioned monitoring can clean up much of the rest ? and yet Craigslist resorts to a flag system that benefits troublemakers as readily as legitimate users. Yes, the criminals are in the minority; but the problem is this: more than on any other site I?ve ever seen (and I work in this industry), criminals flock to Craigslist.
People aren?t fools: as long as Craigslist refuses to evolve, the site will increasingly be defined by bugs, scams, assaults, murder and other illegal activities ? risks and frustrations that fewer and fewer users will be willing to put up with.
- Over the last few years, newspapers and television news stories across the country have been reporting stories about victims ? from theft to rape to murder ? whose only mistake was responding to a Craigslist ad. Note to Craig: telling us that most people are good, is not a sufficient answer. For years, law enforcement agencies have been fighting with Craigslist to clean up the obvious illegal activities on the site ? and Craigslist has repeatedly balked or stalled.
- " by all accounts, he had a normal, happy upbringing." ......how can it be normal with his parents separated?!
The sad fact is, we'll be seeing more and more kids growing up insecure because their parents do not value marriage anymore.
Get a copy of "Growing kids God's way" by Dr Ezzo, and safe our children..... - Reply to this comment



