In late 1983, legendary FBI criminal profiler John Douglas nearly died of encephalitis while tracking a series of slayings in Seattle.
It took Douglas months to recover from the illness that left him despondent and doubtful about his future with the elite behavioral profiling unit he created. "I was afraid I lost my confidence," Douglas tells A&E True Crime.
Then, on June 3, 1985, the undersheriff of Lexington County, South Carolina, called the bureau, seeking expert help. A brazen criminal had snatched Shari Faye Smith, 17, at gunpoint on May 31, 1985, as she checked the driveway mailbox, two days before her high school graduation.
The abductor kept phoning her family, taunting them about the fate of the lovely blonde who'd dreamed of a singing career, Douglas recounts in his latest book "When a Killer Calls," coauthored with Mark Olshaker.
Soon, he was in South Carolina investigating Smith's murder and the related fatal kidnapping of Debra May Helmick. The blonde 9-year-old was grabbed from outside her home on June 14, 1985.
The abductor's sophisticated and cruel schemes tested all of Douglas's skills, but the profiler turned those tactics against the killer, even enlisting Shari's sister in a race to prevent another tragedy.
The profile he developed helped identify Larry Gene Bell—executed in 1996 for both crimes—who Douglas called "one of the most sadistic murderers I've come across." Douglas, who also wrote the classic true crime book "Mindhunter," spoke with A&E True Crime about the profile he came up with for Bell, the breakthrough in finding him and what made him different than all the other killers he's investigated.
You listened to police tapes of Bell speaking with Shari Smith's mother, Hilda, and older sister, Dawn. What could you tell us about him?
This was no amateur. He was fairly criminally sophisticated and educated streetwise. You don't start off with this type of case. You would have a history of other sexual assaults and possibly abduction attempts.
People like this have trouble in interpersonal relationships. They'll try marriage, but the marriage never works out.
Generally, crimes like this are intra-racial, white on white, for example. [Also], he had some kind of electronic device that enabled him to disguise his voice, indicating a background in electronics.
As far as age, I usually start at age 25 [with this type of violent crime]. Here, we have an abduction at a mailbox in broad daylight on a Friday. That's pretty risky. So we start adding years. He was 35. We thought somewhere in the early 30s.
Why did you ask Dawn Smith to help with the investigation?
Bell had just stopped communicating; he stopped calling the Smiths, and we needed calls. The more calls we get, the more we can analyze.
What I also saw is the few times he did call and got in touch with Dawn, we could see there was going to be a fixation [on her]. She looked very much like her younger sister, and he could be targeting her.