Sheriff and district attorney feuding over BTK killer’s possible involvement in cold case

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A district attorney and sheriff’s office in Oklahoma are at odds over the possibility that a 47-year cold case could be linked to the “BTK” serial killer, who was sentenced to life in prison after he confessed to killing 10 people in a bloody spree from the 1970s to the ’90s.

Osage County District Attorney Mike Fisher said at a news conference Monday that there is not enough information to label Dennis Rader, aka the BTK killer, as a suspect in the 1976 disappearance of Cynthia Dawn Kinney, whose body has never been found. Rader nicknamed himself BTK for “bind, torture, kill.”

The sheriff’s office, however, called Rader a “prime suspect” in the case and says Fisher didn’t have enough details to make that determination.

Kinney was 16 when she vanished on June 23, 1976, in Pawhuska, Oklahoma. She was reportedly last seen leaving a laundromat and getting into a car with two women, according to the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System.

In August, the Osage County Sheriff’s Office said it conducted a search “closely tied” to Kinney’s case at Rader’s former home in Park City, Kansas, after receiving information.

The office said in a news release that “items of interest” were found at the home and will undergo a thorough examination to determine if they are linked to Kinney’s case and other unsolved killings.

Authorities have not said what information they received led them to call Rader as a suspect in Kinney’s case. In August, however, the office released an excerpt from his journal in which he referenced a project titled “Bad Wash Day.” Authorities said Rader referred to his victims as projects.

“Laundry Mat were a good place to watch victims and dream,” he wrote. “The Brunette was the target.”

Rader is also a suspect in the death of Shawna Beth Garber, whose body was found in 1990 in McDonald County, Missouri, The Associated Press reported.

Convicted serial killer Dennis Rader, known as the BTK strangler walks into the El Dorado Correctional Facility in El Dorado, Kan., in 2005.

The district attorney, however, suggested Monday that more information is needed to make the connection to Kinney’s disappearance.

“Information has been shared with the media during the last 30 days that suggest Dennis Rader, aka the BTK killer, is a suspect in the disappearance of Cynthia Dawn Kinney from Pawhuska in 1976. While that information may lead to speculation and rumors, our legal justice system cannot guess as to someone’s involvement in a crime no matter the history of the person being accused,” Fisher said.

The district attorney, who said he met with Kinney’s parents last week, said speculation of Rader’s involvement has caused the family “pain, heartache, sleepless nights and emotional distress.”

“As of this date, the information that has been shared is insufficient to file criminal charges against Dennis Rader,” he told reporters.

But the sheriff’s office disputes that and has started the National BTK Task Force, which will use the expertise and resources of federal and local law enforcement agencies from Oklahoma and Kansas to solve cases linked to Rader.

“It is important to note that District Attorney Fisher has not reached out to the OCSO to discuss the details or developments of this investigation,” the sheriff’s office said. “Therefore, his comments regarding the case are based on incomplete information and do not accurately represent the OCSO’s efforts or the progress made.”

The sheriff’s office also accused Fisher of attempting to “derail the investigation” by trying to stop investigators from interviewing Rader in prison. NBC News has reached out to Fisher’s office for comment.

Fisher said he has asked the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation (OSBI) to open a formal investigation into Kinney’s case.

“While there have been prior investigations into Ms. Kinney’s disappearance, I feel it is incumbent upon me as the district attorney to do everything possible to ascertain whether Dennis Rader or someone else was involved in her disappearance,” he said.

The Osage County Sheriff’s Office is also working with OSBI, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation and other agencies on the case.

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