Kidnapping Murder of Leiby Kletzky
Vicki Lynne Hoskinson was a bright and cheery 8-year-old who had completed her day at Homer Davis Elementary School. She pedaled her pink bike that afternoon on what we all believed to be the safe streets of Flowing Wells. She was heading back from dropping a birthday card into a nearby mailbox.
Frank Jarvis Atwood was a 28-year-old pedophile, a drifter from California who lived off his parents. He had been paroled in May 1984 after serving prison time for a 1981 conviction; he'd been found guilty of kidnapping an 8-year-old boy. Atwood asked the boy for directions and then knocked down the boy's bike. He forced the boy to fellate him.
He also had been busted in 1974 for lewd and lascivious conduct with a 14-year-old girl and was sent to a mental health facility.
He used his 9-year-old Datsun 280Z to get Vicki Lynne, striking her bike with the car's bumper that bore telltale pink paint. The bike lay on Pocito Place near Root Lane.
Vicki Lynne's sister found the bike, and her mother rushed down the street to retrieve it. She called 911. Two teenage boys saw the young girl in the black Z. A Homer Davis teacher also saw the car, along with scruffy Atwood, and took down the license plate number.
Frank Jarvis Atwood returned later that day--Sept. 17, 1984--to his transient pals who were hanging out in De Anza Park on East Speedway Boulevard at Stone Avenue. He had blood on his hands and cactus needles on his pants. He boasted to his friends, including one who was coincidentally struck and killed by lightning four days later, that he stabbed a guy after a drug deal went awry. Atwood and his friend Jack McDonald visited with another man and went to a bar to play pool.
Atwood's buddies noticed that he was spending time sanding his knife. Atwood and McDonald left Tucson that night, taking Interstate 10 on their way to New Orleans.
The Z broke down in Kerrville, Texas, less than an hour from San Antonio. Atwood phoned home for help. McDonald heard this significant part of that conversation: "Even if I did do it, you have to help me."
The FBI had already called Atwood's parents, who told agents that their son was getting his car fixed at Ken Stoepel Ford in Kerrville. That's where they arrested him, searched his car and then arranged for it to be carted to San Antonio, where it was searched again.
Title: Kidnapping Murder of Leiby Kletzky 8y/o Similar to Vicky Lynn Hoskinson 8y/o
Uploaded on Jul 20, 2011
Uploaded by: shmekil
Frank Jarvis Atwood was a 28-year-old pedophile, a drifter from California who lived off his parents. He had been paroled in May 1984 after serving prison time for a 1981 conviction; he'd been found guilty of kidnapping an 8-year-old boy. Atwood asked the boy for directions and then knocked down the boy's bike. He forced the boy to fellate him.
He also had been busted in 1974 for lewd and lascivious conduct with a 14-year-old girl and was sent to a mental health facility.
He used his 9-year-old Datsun 280Z to get Vicki Lynne, striking her bike with the car's bumper that bore telltale pink paint. The bike lay on Pocito Place near Root Lane.
Vicki Lynne's sister found the bike, and her mother rushed down the street to retrieve it. She called 911. Two teenage boys saw the young girl in the black Z. A Homer Davis teacher also saw the car, along with scruffy Atwood, and took down the license plate number.
Frank Jarvis Atwood returned later that day--Sept. 17, 1984--to his transient pals who were hanging out in De Anza Park on East Speedway Boulevard at Stone Avenue. He had blood on his hands and cactus needles on his pants. He boasted to his friends, including one who was coincidentally struck and killed by lightning four days later, that he stabbed a guy after a drug deal went awry. Atwood and his friend Jack McDonald visited with another man and went to a bar to play pool.
Atwood's buddies noticed that he was spending time sanding his knife. Atwood and McDonald left Tucson that night, taking Interstate 10 on their way to New Orleans.
The Z broke down in Kerrville, Texas, less than an hour from San Antonio. Atwood phoned home for help. McDonald heard this significant part of that conversation: "Even if I did do it, you have to help me."
The FBI had already called Atwood's parents, who told agents that their son was getting his car fixed at Ken Stoepel Ford in Kerrville. That's where they arrested him, searched his car and then arranged for it to be carted to San Antonio, where it was searched again.
Title: Kidnapping Murder of Leiby Kletzky 8y/o Similar to Vicky Lynn Hoskinson 8y/o
Uploaded on Jul 20, 2011
Uploaded by: shmekil

0 comments for "Kidnapping Murder of Leiby Kletzky"