Carl Eugene Watts (November
7, 1953 – September 21, 2007), also known by his nickname
Coral, was an American
serial killer dubbed "The Sunday Morning
Slasher". He obtained
immunity for a dozen
murders as a result of a
plea
bargain with prosecutors in 1982; at one point it appeared that
he could be released in 2006 despite possibly having committed as
many as 80 murders. He died of
prostate
cancer while serving two sentences of life without parole in a
Michigan prison for the murders of Helen Dutcher and Gloria
Steele.
Early life
Carl
Eugene Watts was born in Killeen, Texas
to Richard Eugene Watts and Dorothy Mae
Young. His father was a
private first class in the
Army, and his mother was a
kindergarten art teacher. When Watts was less
than two years of age, his parents separated and he was raised by
his mother.
Watts and his mother moved to Inkster,
Michigan
, and in
1962, Dorothy Mae married a mechanic named Norman Caesar with whom
she had two daughters.
As a child, Watts was described as being strange. Around the age of
twelve, Watts claimed that this was when he started to fantasize
about torturing and killing girls and young women. During
adolescence, Watts began to stalk girls and is believed to have
killed his first victim before the age of 15. When Watts was 13, he
was infected with
meningitis which caused
him to be held back in the eighth grade. Upon his return to school,
Watts had difficulty keeping up with other students. At school, he
would often receive failing grades, and was reading at a third
grade level by age 16. He also suffered severe
bullying at school.
On June 29, 1969, Watts was arrested for
sexually assaulting 26-year-old Joan Gave.
When Watts
was tried, he was sentenced to the Lafayette Clinic, a mental hospital in Detroit
.
According to a psychiatric assessment, Watts was revealed to suffer
from mild mental retardation, with a full scale
I.Q. of 68, and to have a
delusional thought process. He was released from
the Lafayette Clinic on November 9, 1969.
Despite
his poor grades, Watts graduated from high school in 1973, and
received a football scholarship to
Lane College in Jackson,
Tennessee
. He was expelled from Lane College after
only three months because he was accused of stalking and assaulting
women. Another reason he was expelled was because many people at
Lane College believed Watts was a suspect in the brutal murder of a
female student, however there was not enough evidence to convict
him of the murder.
After his expulsion he moved to Houston, Texas
.
Murders
Watts' career as a serial killer began when he was 20 years old in
1974, by kidnapping his victims from their homes, torturing them,
and then murdering them. On October 30, 1974, Watts tortured and
brutally murdered the 20-year-old Gloria Steele, who was believed
to be his second victim. Watts killed females between the ages of
14 and 44 using methods such as
strangulation,
stabbing,
bludgeoning, and
drowning. Watts had murdered dozens of
women between 1974 and 1982, and despite how many women he
murdered, Watts was not discovered as a serial killer for almost
eight years.
There were several reasons for this. He attacked in several
different jurisdictions and even different states. With the advent
of DNA testing it was still nearly impossible because he rarely
dallied with his victims, unlike most serial killers of women and
girls, even though his crimes were not thought to be sexually
motivated. Watts was also not suspected to be involved with any of
the murders by the people who knew him, and was not a police
suspect in any of the murders until his arrest in 1982.
Arrest and discovery
On May 23, 1982, Watts was arrested for breaking into the home of
two young women in Houston, and attempting to kill them. While in
custody,
police began to link Watts with the
recent murders of a number of women.
Until early 1981, he
had lived in Michigan
, where
authorities suspected him of being responsible for the murders of
at least 10 women and girls there. Watts was previously
questioned about the murders in 1975, but there had not been enough
evidence to convict him. At that time,
Watts had spent a year in
prison for
attacking a woman, who survived.
Prosecutors in Texas
did not feel
they had enough evidence to convict Watts of murder, so in 1982
they arranged a plea bargain. If
Watts gave full details and confessions to his crimes, they would
give him immunity from the murder charges and he would, instead,
face just a charge of
burglary with intent
to murder. This charge carried a 60-year sentence.
He agreed with the
deal and promptly confessed in detail to 12 murders in Texas
.
However,
Michigan
authorities refused to go in on the deal so the
cases in that state remained open.
Watts later claimed that he had killed 40 women, and then implied
the total was as many as 80. He is now suspected to have killed
more than 100 women. Several of the killings were not linked to
each other.
Michigan trial
Watts was sentenced to the agreed 60 years. However, shortly after
he began serving time, the
Texas
Court of Appeals ruled that he had not been informed that the
bathtub and water he attempted to drown Lori Lister in was
considered a deadly weapon. The ruling reclassified him as a
nonviolent felon, making him eligible for early release. At the
time, Texas law allowed nonviolent felons to have three days
deducted from their sentences for every one day served as long as
they were well behaved. Watts was a model prisoner, and had enough
time deducted from his sentence that he could have been released as
early as May 9, 2006. The law allowing early release was abolished
after public outcry, but could not be applied retroactively
according to the
Texas
Constitution.
In 2004,
Michigan Attorney
General Mike Cox went on national TV
asking for anyone to come forward with information in order to try
and convict Watts of murder to ensure he was not released.
Joseph
Foy of Westland,
Michigan
, came forward to say that he had seen a man fitting
Watts' description murder Helen Dutcher, a 36-year-old woman who
died after being stabbed twelve times in December 1979. Foy
identified Watts by his eyes, which he described as being "
evil" and devoid of emotion. Although Watts had
immunity from prosecution for the 12 killings he had admitted to in
Texas, he had no immunity agreement in Michigan. Before his 2004
trial, law enforcement officials asked the trial judge to allow the
Texas confessions into evidence, which he agreed to.
Watts was promptly charged with the murder of Helen Dutcher. On
November 17, 2004, after hearing eyewitness testimony from Joseph
Foy, a Michigan jury convicted him.
On December 7, he was sentenced to
life imprisonment.
Two days later,
authorities in Michigan started making moves to try him for the
murder of Western Michigan University
student Gloria Steele, who was stabbed to death in
1974.
Watts'
trial for the Steele murder began in Kalamazoo, Michigan
on July 25, 2007; closing arguments concluded July
26. The following day the jury returned a guilty verdict.
He was
incarcerated at a maximum security prison in Ionia,
Michigan
.
Watts was
sentenced to life imprisonment without parole on September 13; he
died of prostate cancer on September
21 in a Jackson,
Michigan
hospital.
The case is featured in episodes of
Cold Case Files and
truTV series
The Investigators.
References
Bibliography
External links