Edward Harold Bell

Edward Harold Bell (1937 – April 20, 2019) was an American sex offender, murderer and the first fugitive to be featured in the Texan rendition of America's Most Wanted. Following his capture in Panama City, Panama in 1993, he was extradited, convicted and sentenced to a 70-year term for the murder of a Marine in 1978, and later confessed to killing eleven girls during the 1970s.[1] His claims were never conclusively verified, and he died behind bars in 2019, having recanted his previous claims.[2]

Edward Harold Bell
Born1937
Texas, U.S.
DiedApril 20, 2019(2019-04-20) (aged 81–82)
Other namesCecil Boyd
"Wally"
"Butch"
Conviction(s)Murder x1
Numerous sex offences
Criminal penalty70 years imprisonment
Details
Victims1–16
Span of crimes
1978
1970s–1992 (suspected)
CountryUnited States, possibly Panama
State(s)Texas (confirmed)
Chiriquí, Panamá (suspected)
Date apprehended
February 14, 1993

Early life and crimes

Edward Harold Bell was born in 1940 in southern Texas. According to his claims, his father, an oil field worker, frequently moved the family to various towns surrounding the Houston area, and allegedly suffered physical abuse both from him, his scoutmasters at the Boy Scouts and one of his cousins.[1] Bell would also claim in later interviews that his father encouraged him to do violent crime, ranging from robbing banks and raping girls, in addition to encouraging him to kill himself.[1]

In spite of these claims, Bell's life was considered enviable by family and friends alike, as he graduated from the Columbus High School in Columbus and later earned a P.E. degree at the Texas A&M University in College Station, where he also played in the university's Aggie Band.[1] After graduation, he found work as a licensed diver and married his first wife in San Marcos, with the newlyweds then moving to western Texas, where they had three children. After living on a ranch in Terlingua for some time, Bell, who worked as an itinerant pharmaceutical salesman, sold the ranch for an office in downtown Houston.[1]

In 1966, Bell was arrested for exposing himself to a pair of little girls in Sudan, for which he was interned at the Big Spring State Psychiatric Hospital.[1] After spending some time in treatment, he was released, only be rearrested for a similar charge in 1969 after he exposed himself to the 13-year-old daughter of a Lubbock policeman.[3] In order to avoid prosecution, he was interned at the University of Texas Medical Branch for further treatment, where he continued to romance underage patients. By the time of his release, now divorced and forbidden contact with his children, Bell married a 17-year-old female patient and the pair moved a beach house in Galveston.[1] There, he became acquainted with Doug Pruns, a surfer who made custom boards out of his shop based in the area, who allowed him to become a silent partner in the business, despite his reservations about his friend's behavior. Through the mid-to-late 1970s, Bell was repeatedly arrested for flashing and masturbating in front of young girls in Lubbock, Pasadena, Plainview, Bacliff, Houston and Gretna, Louisiana, but was either never charged or the cases were dropped altogether.[1]

Murder of Larry Dickens and escape

On August 24, 1978, while driving his red and white GMC truck around Pasadena, Bell stopped in front of a group of young girls, pulled down his pants and began masturbating in front of them. His actions caught the attention of 26-year-old Larry Dean Dickens, a Marine with a young daughter, who rushed in and got hold of the man's keys in an attempt to prevent him from fleeing.[4] Suddenly, Bell pulled out a pistol and shot Dickens, who staggered into his mother's garage and collapsed onto the floor in front of his horrified mother, who had watched the whole ordeal go by from inside the house. While she was trying to calm Dickens down, Bell grabbed a rifle from his truck, went up to the wounded man and shot him in the forehead before fleeing. He was caught by police shortly afterwards and interned to await trial on a $125,000 bail bond; however, when the trial date came about, Bell did not appear and was thereafter designated as a wanted fugitive.[4]

For the next 14 years, Bell travelled around various locations in Mexico and Central America using a sailboat, posing as a dead cousin named Cecil Boyd. Throughout this time, he made a living through giving dive trips to American tourists and gold panning. In a 1985 episode of America's Most Wanted, he was named as Texas' most wanted fugitive, bringing further attention to his case and reinvigorating the search for him.[5] After spending time in Costa Rica in 1988 and 1989, Bell moved for a few months in Boquete, Panama, before finally settling in Panama City, where he married for the third time to a young girl from Chepo. At this time, it was reported that he worked at a dock in the port town of Cristóbal.[6]

Arrest, trial and imprisonment

On February 14, 1993, a joint operation conducted by the FBI and the Panamanian National Police led to Bell's arrest at a yacht club in Panama City.[7] At his June trial, Bell's attorneys attempted to argue that the killing was done in self-defense, claiming that Dickens was an "unstable" who had threatened to kill him in the name of Jesus.[8] This argument was disproven, and Bell was subsequently convicted and sentenced to 70 years imprisonment. After his sentencing, Bell claimed he had quit being a "flasher" while in Panama, but expressed regret that he had not done earlier so Dickens' life could be spared.[9]

Confessions and suspicions

In 1998, Bell wrote several letters to prosecutors in both Galveston and Harris counties, claiming that he had killed eleven teenage girls in their jurisdictions between 1971 and 1977. Referring to them as the "eleven that went to Heaven", Bell claimed direct responsibility for the murder of four victims (Colette Wilson, Debbie Ackerman, Maria Johnson and Kimberly Pitchford), but also said that he did not the names of the remaining seven.[10] Despite these gruesome claims, the letters were kept secret until 2011, when they were finally revealed to the public in an attempt to uncover any potential leads that could verify Bell's accounts.[11]

This revelation was met with mixed feelings by some of the victims' family members, who were left unsure whether the killer was being genuine or was just a ploy, due to his requirement that he be given legal immunity in exchange for a full confession.[4] On the other hand, other family members and some investigators considered the claims to be credible, as Bell's criminal past, proximity to the crime scenes at the right dates and mentioning details not known to the public made him a viable suspect in their eyes.[10] In addition to this, Panamanian authorities announced that they considered him a suspect in four rape-murders committed in their country: two while he was residing in Boquete, and another two in Panama City.[6]

Death

Despite several investigations into his claims, Bell was never charged with any other murder besides Dickens'. On April 20, 2019, he died from undisclosed causes at the Wallace Pack Unit, aged 82.[4] His death was met with relief from both Dickens' and the other victims' family members, who said that their loved ones could now rest in peace.[2]

See also

In the media

  • Bell's feature in a 1992 episode of Unsolved Mysteries led to his eventual arrest a year later. In 2017, a TV documentary titled The Eleven was produced to examine his alleged confession to the murders of the eleven girls found in the Killing Fields.

References

  1. Lise Olsen (September 25, 2011). "Confessions of a cold-blooded killer". Houston Chronicle. Archived from the original on October 14, 2013.
  2. Lise Olsen (April 20, 2019). "Texas killer's death leaves unanswered questions in girls' slayings". Houston Chronicle. Archived from the original on August 23, 2019.
  3. "Student Charged With Exposure". Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. April 3, 1969 via Newspapers.com.
  4. "Relatives unsure of killer's claim in Texas deaths". The Daily Review. October 12, 2011 via Newspapers.com.
  5. "Texas Most Wanted Fugitive N#1". The Waco Citizen. January 18, 1985 via Newspapers.com.
  6. Pablo Castillo Miranda (December 16, 2018). "Brutal asesino en serie violó a 15 niñas" [Brutal serial killer raped 15 girls] (in Spanish). El Siglo. Archived from the original on December 27, 2021.
  7. "Murder suspect arrested". The Paris News. February 15, 1993 via Newspapers.com.
  8. "Flasher convicted in 1978 slaying". The Daily News Journal. June 29, 1993 via Newspapers.com.
  9. "Flasher convicted of murder". The Daily News. June 30, 1993 via Newspapers.com.
  10. Michael Hagerty (October 18, 2017). "Investigators Think They Know Who Killed Eleven Girls Around Galveston In The 1970s". KUHT. Archived from the original on December 28, 2021.
  11. "Killer claims other deaths". Longview News-Journal. September 29, 2011 via Newspapers.com.
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