Ottis Elwood Toole (1947–September 15, 1996) (sometimes spelled Otis) was an American criminal. Though he claimed to be a serial killer and cannibal, and was the suspect in several unsolved murders, he recanted and restated a number of confessions.
Toole was twice convicted of murder, and confessed to four more murder charges before dying in prison.
He was perhaps best-known as a suspect in the murder of Adam Walsh, son of John Walsh, host of the television program America's Most Wanted, and as the reputed partner of Henry Lee Lucas.
Toole ran away from home repeatedly. He claimed to have started fires in abandoned homes from a young age.
Toole claimed to have committed his first murder at the age of 14. After being propositioned for sex by a traveling salesman, he ran over the salesman with his own car. This claim is unverified.
Toole's first arrest as an adult was in 1964, on a charge of loitering. Toole married briefly, but his bride reportedly left him after realizing he was homosexual.
About 1978, Toole met Henry Lee Lucas in Florida. Both would later claim to have committed many hundreds of murders, sometimes at the behest of a secret cult called "The Hand of Death." Lucas would recant his confessions, saying he made such statements only to improve his living conditions in jail. Though some authorities have argued there is significant doubt as to Lucas' guilt, Toole is still generally seen as a serial killer.
In April 1984, Toole was convicted and sentenced to death for a 1982 arson incident that killed 64-year-old George Sonnenberg in Jacksonville, Florida. Later that year, Toole was judged guilty of the 1983 murder of 19-year-old Tallahassee, Florida, resident Ada Johnson, and received a second death sentence; on appeal, however, both sentences were reduced to life in prison.
Toole pleaded guilty to four more murders in 1991 and received four more life sentences.
Toole died in September of 1996 in prison from cirrhosis of the liver.
A character based on Toole was portrayed by Tom Towles in Portrait of a Serial Killer.
Estep steadfastly maintained his innocence until he was released on his first parole bid. At the time of the murder he was supposed to have been wearing a mustache, 5' 10", 150 pounds, and driving a red pickup truck. His name was not officially cleared, but the unusal behavior of the parole board is generally seen to be an unwilling admission of a mistake.
In 1984 defense investigators turned up what appeared to be important evidence to support Estep’s claim: a confession to the crime by Ottis Toole. However, in a report by Toole's mother from the day of Cousin's murder, she stated that her truck tires had been slashed by vandals, and Ottis Toole was there as a witness when police answered the call. Confronted with the report, Toole recanted his confession.
Toole’s description of the circumstances surrounding the crime supported his story. The confession ignited a flurry of activity by both the defense and the prosecution involved in the original trial, including interviews with Toole and his partner Henry Lee Lucas.
On January 23, 1985, a documentary entitled "Park Estep: A Reasonable Doubt" aired on KKTV in Colorado Springs, discussing the recent changes in evidence. It was submitted for a George Foster Peabody Award and information about it can be found in the Peabody Award Archives at the University of Georgia Main Library.
1947 births | 1996 deaths | American serial killers | Cannibals | Jacksonvillians | Lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender people
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"Ottis Toole".
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