Alcala’s known history of violence began in 1968 when he lured 8-year-old Tali Shapiro into his Hollywood apartment after offering to take her photograph. A witness saw the child being taken and contacted police. When officers entered the apartment, they found Shapiro severely beaten and unconscious but still alive. Alcala fled before police arrived and escaped to New York, where he enrolled in film school at New York University under the alias “John Berger.”
While living in New York, Alcala worked at a summer arts camp in New Hampshire as a counselor. In 1971, two girls at the camp recognized his face from an FBI wanted poster they had seen at a local post office and alerted adults, leading to his arrest after months as a fugitive. Despite the brutality of the attack on Tali, Alcala ultimately pleaded guilty to a lesser child molestation charge after the girl’s family relocated to Mexico and was unwilling to return for trial. He served only about 34 months in prison before being released and later transferred to a state psychiatric facility, where doctors eventually declared him rehabilitated.
Within months of his release, Alcala was arrested again when he was caught smoking marijuana with a minor. Once again, however, he avoided a lengthy sentence and was paroled during the mid-1970s, decisions that later drew intense criticism as additional killings were connected to him.
Investigators eventually concluded that many of Alcala’s murders occurred during this same period. In New York in 1971, 23-year-old flight attendant Cornelia Crilley was found strangled in her Manhattan apartment. In 1977, 23-year-old Ellen Hover disappeared after telling friends she planned to meet a man connected to photography work. Her remains were eventually discovered on the grounds of a hospital near the Rockefeller estate in Westchester County, though the case remained unsolved for decades. Authorities would later connect both killings to Alcala.
By the late 1970s, authorities said Alcala was traveling regularly between California and New York while continuing to target young women. Prosecutors later tied him to the murders of Jill Barcomb, Charlotte Lamb, Jill Parenteau and Georgia Wixted, all killed in California between 1977 and 1979. Several victims had been brutally sexually assaulted, beaten and strangled.
During this same period, Alcala briefly worked as a typesetter for the Los Angeles Times and, in 1978, he appeared as a contestant on The Dating Game. Introduced to viewers as a charming photographer with an eccentric personality, Alcala won the episode. The woman who selected him later declined to go on a date, reportedly because she found him unsettling.
Investigation
The case that ultimately exposed the full scope of Alcala’s crimes intensified after the disappearance and murder of 12-year-old Robin Samsoe in 1979. Witnesses had reported seeing Samsoe speaking with a man carrying a camera near Huntington Beach shortly before she vanished, and detectives circulated a composite sketch based on those accounts. Alcala soon emerged as a suspect after an authority recognized him from the sketch and informed authorities about his violent criminal history.
Weeks later, Samsoe’s remains were discovered in the foothills outside Los Angeles by a park ranger. Her body was badly decomposed and mutilated by wild animals, making it nearly impossible to determine the exact cause of death, although investigators did locate a knife nearby that Alcala may have used in the murders. Samsoe was eventually identified via dental records.
As investigators built their case against Alcala, they learned he maintained a Seattle storage locker and obtained a search warrant for the unit. Inside, detectives discovered hundreds of photographs of women, teenage girls and children, many of whom investigators could not identify.
The discovery of the photographs became one of the defining aspects of the case and contributed to growing suspicions that Alcala’s crimes extended far beyond Robin’s murder. Investigators also began reexamining unsolved murders involving young women in California and New York, several of whom had been strangled after apparent encounters with a man posing as a photographer.
For years, however, the full scope of the killings remained unclear. Many of the murders occurred before modern forensic databases and DNA testing were widely available, limiting investigators’ ability to connect older cases. That changed in the late 1990s and early 2000s, when advances in DNA analysis allowed authorities to revisit preserved biological evidence from unsolved murders and conclusively link the series of murders to Alcala.
Legal Proceedings