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William Clyde Gibson

William Clyde Gibson III (born October 10, 1957) is an American serial killer and rapist who is currently on Indiana's death row for the sexually-motivated murders of two women in 2002 and 2012, in addition to serving a 65-year sentence for a third murder committed in 2012. A habitual criminal noted for his increasingly violent streaks and his handlebar moustache, Gibson has claimed responsibility for upwards of 30 additional murders across multiple states, none of which have been confirmed.

William Clyde Gibson
IDOC mugshot
Born
William Clyde Gibson III

(1957-10-10) October 10, 1957 (age 65)
Criminal statusIncarcerated
Conviction(s)Murder (3 counts)
Auto theft
Criminal penaltyDeath
Details
Victims3+
Span of crimes
2002 – 2012 (confirmed murders)
CountryUnited States
State(s)Indiana, others alleged
Date apprehended
April 19, 2012
Imprisoned atIndiana State Prison, Michigan City, Indiana

Early life

William Clyde Gibson III was born on October 10, 1957, in Raleigh, North Carolina, the youngest of four children born to William, Jr., a foreman for a tree-trimming company, and Jeraline "Geri" Gibson, a cashier at a Sears store. When he was two years old, the family moved out of state and settled in New Albany, Indiana, where Gibson grew up. In later interviews, he claimed that he had never experienced any abuse or neglect from either of his parents. He said he was even spoiled but acknowledged that his father was an alcoholic who would become combative when drunk.[1]

From an early age, Gibson displayed odd behavior, having trouble speaking to others, struggling at school, and preferring to stay home with his mother. Whenever he went to school, Gibson was bullied up until the sixth grade, when he became large enough to defend himself - however, he started bullying other children. He often got in trouble for fighting, talking in class, and not following directions.[2] This continued outside of school, with a childhood friend, Melodie Schultz, claiming that Gibson had shot another child in the eye with a pellet gun. At age 13, he also started drinking and later that year, would be arrested for stealing a motorbike.[2]

Eventually, Gibson dropped out of school and continued to commit small-time crimes, including drunk driving and crashing the car. Two weeks after this incident, he joined the Army and was stationed in West Germany as a mechanic. During his deployment, he was awarded badges for marksmanship and hand grenade usage, but at this time, he developed an addiction to drugs such as heroin, cocaine, and LSD, which he often mixed with alcohol.[2] In 1979, he was dishonorably discharged for stealing a car and sentenced to a year of imprisonment at Fort Leavenworth, where he attempted to kill himself by slitting his wrists on one occasion.[3] After his release, he married an artist in June 1980, but after he was diagnosed with infertility, Gibson intensified his drug usage, supposedly smoking upwards of 20 marijuana joints a day.

Crimes

On January 5 1991, Gibson hit his pickup truck in an automobile accident but sped off after seeing a nearby police officer attempt to inspect the damage. In an ensuing high-speed chase, he eventually crashed into another vehicle, from which the other driver had eight ribs broken, and Gibson suffered injuries that required numerous stitches on his head.[2] Eight months later, Gibson was charged with robbery and sexual battery relating to an incident involving a 21-year-old woman whom he sexually assaulted in a phone booth near the Louisville Galleria in Louisville, Kentucky.[3] At the subsequent trial for this case, his lawyer claimed that he was mentally ill and requested a competency evaluation, which the court granted. The examining psychologist, J. Robert Noonan, concluded that Gibson had an IQ of 79 and refused to take responsibility for his actions, which he blamed on his alcoholism, but did not suffer from any mental illnesses that impaired his judgment.[2] Due to this, he was found competent to stand trial and accepted an Alford plea, for which he was sentenced to seven years imprisonment at the Luther Luckett Correctional Complex in La Grange. Upon learning of his conviction, his wife divorced him.[4]

During his imprisonment, where he was ordered to attend a sex offender rehabilitation program, Gibson refused to admit responsibility for his crime and was thus deemed ineligible to participate. While he was considered an obedient inmate who rarely caused trouble, even earning an associate's degree in art from the Lindsey Wilson College, several psychiatric assessments concluded that Gibson had poor judgment and often experienced conflicting feelings of loneliness and losing control.[4] Despite these diagnostics and his refusal to complete the rehabilitation program, he was deemed unlikely to re-offend. He was released on April 5, 1999, after which he was added to the Indiana Sex and Violent Offender Registry.[3] After his release, he started dating Kelly Bailey. The pair moved to an apartment in Borden, Indiana. However, Bailey left him in 2000 due to Gibson's worsening drug habits.[2]

Later that year, Bailey filed a police report claiming that Gibson had blocked her car with his vehicle while she was delivering newspapers and proceeded to hit her before stealing her car keys and fleeing the scene. While her case was considered credible due to the visible injuries on her face, it was ultimately not pursued due to a lack of evidence.[4] The following year, Gibson was arrested for stealing a Harley-Davidson motorcycle and sentenced to 3 years imprisonment, but was allowed to spend half of that time at the Madison State Hospital in Madison, where he would receive treatment for his drug and alcohol addiction.[2] Hospital staff claimed that Gibson seemed disinterested in the treatments, and two psychiatrists later diagnosed him with a bipolar disorder, for which he was prescribed Seroquel, but again, no indications of a mental illness or a psychiatric disorder were noted. After his release from the hospital, he was sent to serve the rest of his sentence at the Floyd County Jail, where he remained until his discharge on March 12, 2002.[4]

Known murders

On October 10, 2002, Gibson was out drinking at a bar in Jeffersonville when he met 44-year-old Karen Sue Hodella, a beautician from Port Orange, Florida, who was visiting a boyfriend of hers at the time. After spending some time at local bars, the pair found themselves at an apartment complex in New Albany. They argued over some prescription medication that Gibson had supposedly stolen. Angered by the accusations, Gibson punched Hodella in the face, then took out a pocket knife and stabbed her multiple times in the throat before driving around and dumping her body in Clarksville. Soon after the murder, he had a tattoo inscribed on his lower right arm indicating the date of the murder, accompanied by an image of a knife.[5] Hodella's badly decomposed body was found on January 7, 2003, and identified via thumbprints from a previous arrest.

Three weeks after the murder, Gibson was arrested for driving a GMC truck while drunk. After going through a four-day withdrawal, he was examined by the prison's psychiatrist, Dr. Daniel Howerton.[4] While Gibson complained of frequent headaches, stomachaches, insomnia and hypochondriasis, Howerton and the prison's mental therapist concluded that he suffered from mild anxiety and had indications of anti-social behavior, but was otherwise sane. In May 2003, Gibson sued the prison authorities, claiming that they had improperly denied him access to Seroquel and for housing him in squalid conditions, but the suit was thrown out by a federal judge, who considered it baseless.[4]

After being released from jail, Gibson continued hanging around bars, but on February 21, 2006, he stole the purse and $300 from a female acquaintance. Her husband tracked down Gibson's brown Toyota and had him arrested for theft, with Gibson serving a 3-year sentence until he was released circa Independence Day in 2009.[4] During that time, he found a job at C&C Hardwood Flooring in Borden, where he was described as a diligent worker, and was regarded positively by friends and neighbors for attending the local non-denominational "Power of the Cross" church, making papier-mâché figures and for helping his sick mother - on the other hand, patrons of the bars he frequented considered him strange, and on at least a few occasions, he had asked out women to visit his home, to varying success.[4]

Gibson eventually stopped attending church altogether in late August 2011, when his mother was admitted into a nursing home. She passed away at Floyd Memorial Hospital on January 18, 2012, with some neighbors suspecting that her death greatly impacted Gibson's psyche. On March 24 that year, he met 35-year-old Stephanie Marie Kirk at the Uptown Bar in New Albany, where he arranged to take her on a motorcycle ride. After spending the day doing drugs and having sex, the pair returned to Gibson's house, where they argued over some pills.[6] In his anger, Gibson proceeded to rape and strangle her, sexually assaulted her body, breaking her back in the process and then burying her body in his backyard.[7] On April 18, he was visited by a 75-year-old friend of his late mother, Christine Whitis. The latter had always supported Gibson and even gave him money. He raped and strangled her before mutilating her corpse, cutting one of her breasts off. Then, he left the body on the garage floor, surrounded by garbage bags.

Arrest, trials and imprisonment

On the following day, one of Gibson's sisters went to their mother's house to settle the division of the family estate, and after checking the garage and finding Whitis' body, she immediately notified the police.[8] Later that day, Gibson was arrested for drunk driving in Whitis' car, and was charged with her murder five days later. A few days later, he confessed responsibility for Hodella's murder.[9] He also willingly led them to the location where he had buried her body, and on April 27, authorities dug up her body from his backyard. On May 23, Gibson was officially charged with her murder as well, with prosecutors announcing that they would seek the death penalty for all three killings.[10]

During his murder trial, prosecutors presented an interview Gibson had given to investigators upon his arrest, during which he claimed that an "evil" had overcome him and had made him commit the murder.[11] On October 25, 2013, Gibson was found guilty in Whitis' murder at a jury trial, with the jurors taking less than 20 minutes to find him guilty on all charges.[12] At his sentencing the following month, Gibson was subsequently handed a death sentence, to which he told the sentencing judge that it was "no big deal" and that he deserved what he was getting.[13] In regards to his upcoming murder trials, he changed his plea and waived his right to a speedy trial, choosing to plead guilty to Hodella's murder instead. As part of the deal, it was decided that evidence presented at the Hodella trial would not be used as evidence or an aggravating factor in any follow-up trials.[14] A substantial issue arose when Gibson had a tattoo done on the back of his shaved head, which said "Death Row X3". According to Justice Susan Orth, the tattoo could prejudice the jury and possibly prevent a fair trial, and because of this, prison authorities were forbidden from cutting Gibson's hair so the tattoo could be covered up.[5]

At this final murder trial, Gibson unexpectedly pleaded guilty again, waiving his right to a jury trial.[15] In spite of the guilty plea, prosecutors pushed for another death sentence, aiming to prove aggravating factors during the commission of Kirk's murder.[6] On August 15, 2014, Gibson was sentenced to death again, with sentencing Justice Orth deeming that it was "the only appropriate sentence" in regards to the brutal killing.[16]

Aftermath

Since his incarceration, Gibson has repeatedly appealed his death sentences, with his defense lawyer claiming that his confession to the Kirk murder was a mitigating circumstance.[17] These appeals were rejected by the Indiana Supreme Court, which reaffirmed all of his convictions.[18]

In 2018, he was among several death row inmates to be featured in the documentary Inside Death Row, hosted by British journalist Trevor McDonald.[19] Gibson has also done several interviews on various podcasts, on which he has professed responsibility for an additional 30 murders committed across multiple states, additionally claiming that he has sexually abused and even cannibalized the victims' corpses. Among the murders he has confessed to is the 2000 murder of Elizabeth Banister, who was stabbed to death at her home in Evansville, but so far, he has not been charged with her murder.[20]

See also

References

  1. ^ Andrew Wolfson, Harold J. Adams and Jason Riley (June 17, 2012). "Is This The Face of a Serial Killer?". The Courier-Journal. p. A1 – via Newspapers.com.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Andrew Wolfson, Harold J. Adams and Jason Riley (June 17, 2012). "Is This The Face of a Serial Killer?". The Courier-Journal. p. A6 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ a b c "Remains from Ind. man's yard identified". Journal & Courier. April 29, 2012 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Andrew Wolfson, Harold J. Adams and Jason Riley (June 17, 2012). "Is This The Face of a Serial Killer?". The Courier-Journal. p. A7 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ a b "Gibson guilty again". The Courier-Journal. March 21, 2014. p. A11 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ a b Grace Schneider (July 29, 2014). "Gibson victim's back broken". The Courier-Journal. p. A12 – via Newspapers.com.
  7. ^ Grace Schneider (July 29, 2014). "Gibson victim's back broken". The Courier-Journal. p. A3 – via Newspapers.com.
  8. ^ "Clarksville woman's death was homicide". The Courier-Journal. April 23, 2012 – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ "S. Indiana man charged in killings decade apart". Tipton County Tribune. April 25, 2012 – via Newspapers.com.
  10. ^ Bruce Schreiner and Rick Callahan (May 24, 2014). "New Albany man charged with murdering third woman". The Herald – via Newspapers.com.
  11. ^ Charlie White (October 21, 2013). . The Indianapolis Star. Archived from the original on July 28, 2021. Retrieved March 13, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  12. ^ "Jury finds Indiana man guilty of killing woman". The Progress-Index. October 26, 2013 – via Newspapers.com.
  13. ^ "Death sentence ordered for woman's slaying". The Republic. November 27, 2013 – via Newspapers.com.
  14. ^ "Gibson guilty again". The Courier-Journal. March 21, 2014. p. A3 – via Newspapers.com.
  15. ^ "Evansville man pleads guilty to 3rd murder". The Tribune. June 4, 2014 – via Newspapers.com.
  16. ^ Baylee Pulliam (August 16, 2014). "Serial killer Gibson gets 2nd death sentence". The Cincinnati Enquirer – via Newspapers.com.
  17. ^ . The Indianapolis Star. December 10, 2015. Archived from the original on October 26, 2020. Retrieved November 7, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  18. ^ Dave Stafford (October 24, 2019). "Supreme Court reaffirms death sentence in 'brutal' 2012, 2003 murders". The Indiana Lawyer. Archived from the original on March 12, 2022.
  19. ^ Rebecca Nicholson (February 2, 2018). . The Guardian. Archived from the original on June 15, 2018. Retrieved June 18, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  20. ^ Bob Gaetjens (September 14, 2020). . Record-Courier. Archived from the original on October 19, 2021. Retrieved March 13, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)

External links

  • (archived)
  • Gibson v. Indiana (2018)

william, clyde, gibson, born, october, 1957, american, serial, killer, rapist, currently, indiana, death, sexually, motivated, murders, women, 2002, 2012, addition, serving, year, sentence, third, murder, committed, 2012, habitual, criminal, noted, increasingl. William Clyde Gibson III born October 10 1957 is an American serial killer and rapist who is currently on Indiana s death row for the sexually motivated murders of two women in 2002 and 2012 in addition to serving a 65 year sentence for a third murder committed in 2012 A habitual criminal noted for his increasingly violent streaks and his handlebar moustache Gibson has claimed responsibility for upwards of 30 additional murders across multiple states none of which have been confirmed William Clyde GibsonIDOC mugshotBornWilliam Clyde Gibson III 1957 10 10 October 10 1957 age 65 Raleigh North Carolina U S Criminal statusIncarceratedConviction s Murder 3 counts Auto theftCriminal penaltyDeathDetailsVictims3 Span of crimes2002 2012 confirmed murders CountryUnited StatesState s Indiana others allegedDate apprehendedApril 19 2012Imprisoned atIndiana State Prison Michigan City Indiana Contents 1 Early life 2 Crimes 2 1 Known murders 3 Arrest trials and imprisonment 4 Aftermath 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEarly life EditWilliam Clyde Gibson III was born on October 10 1957 in Raleigh North Carolina the youngest of four children born to William Jr a foreman for a tree trimming company and Jeraline Geri Gibson a cashier at a Sears store When he was two years old the family moved out of state and settled in New Albany Indiana where Gibson grew up In later interviews he claimed that he had never experienced any abuse or neglect from either of his parents He said he was even spoiled but acknowledged that his father was an alcoholic who would become combative when drunk 1 From an early age Gibson displayed odd behavior having trouble speaking to others struggling at school and preferring to stay home with his mother Whenever he went to school Gibson was bullied up until the sixth grade when he became large enough to defend himself however he started bullying other children He often got in trouble for fighting talking in class and not following directions 2 This continued outside of school with a childhood friend Melodie Schultz claiming that Gibson had shot another child in the eye with a pellet gun At age 13 he also started drinking and later that year would be arrested for stealing a motorbike 2 Eventually Gibson dropped out of school and continued to commit small time crimes including drunk driving and crashing the car Two weeks after this incident he joined the Army and was stationed in West Germany as a mechanic During his deployment he was awarded badges for marksmanship and hand grenade usage but at this time he developed an addiction to drugs such as heroin cocaine and LSD which he often mixed with alcohol 2 In 1979 he was dishonorably discharged for stealing a car and sentenced to a year of imprisonment at Fort Leavenworth where he attempted to kill himself by slitting his wrists on one occasion 3 After his release he married an artist in June 1980 but after he was diagnosed with infertility Gibson intensified his drug usage supposedly smoking upwards of 20 marijuana joints a day Crimes EditOn January 5 1991 Gibson hit his pickup truck in an automobile accident but sped off after seeing a nearby police officer attempt to inspect the damage In an ensuing high speed chase he eventually crashed into another vehicle from which the other driver had eight ribs broken and Gibson suffered injuries that required numerous stitches on his head 2 Eight months later Gibson was charged with robbery and sexual battery relating to an incident involving a 21 year old woman whom he sexually assaulted in a phone booth near the Louisville Galleria in Louisville Kentucky 3 At the subsequent trial for this case his lawyer claimed that he was mentally ill and requested a competency evaluation which the court granted The examining psychologist J Robert Noonan concluded that Gibson had an IQ of 79 and refused to take responsibility for his actions which he blamed on his alcoholism but did not suffer from any mental illnesses that impaired his judgment 2 Due to this he was found competent to stand trial and accepted an Alford plea for which he was sentenced to seven years imprisonment at the Luther Luckett Correctional Complex in La Grange Upon learning of his conviction his wife divorced him 4 During his imprisonment where he was ordered to attend a sex offender rehabilitation program Gibson refused to admit responsibility for his crime and was thus deemed ineligible to participate While he was considered an obedient inmate who rarely caused trouble even earning an associate s degree in art from the Lindsey Wilson College several psychiatric assessments concluded that Gibson had poor judgment and often experienced conflicting feelings of loneliness and losing control 4 Despite these diagnostics and his refusal to complete the rehabilitation program he was deemed unlikely to re offend He was released on April 5 1999 after which he was added to the Indiana Sex and Violent Offender Registry 3 After his release he started dating Kelly Bailey The pair moved to an apartment in Borden Indiana However Bailey left him in 2000 due to Gibson s worsening drug habits 2 Later that year Bailey filed a police report claiming that Gibson had blocked her car with his vehicle while she was delivering newspapers and proceeded to hit her before stealing her car keys and fleeing the scene While her case was considered credible due to the visible injuries on her face it was ultimately not pursued due to a lack of evidence 4 The following year Gibson was arrested for stealing a Harley Davidson motorcycle and sentenced to 3 years imprisonment but was allowed to spend half of that time at the Madison State Hospital in Madison where he would receive treatment for his drug and alcohol addiction 2 Hospital staff claimed that Gibson seemed disinterested in the treatments and two psychiatrists later diagnosed him with a bipolar disorder for which he was prescribed Seroquel but again no indications of a mental illness or a psychiatric disorder were noted After his release from the hospital he was sent to serve the rest of his sentence at the Floyd County Jail where he remained until his discharge on March 12 2002 4 Known murders Edit On October 10 2002 Gibson was out drinking at a bar in Jeffersonville when he met 44 year old Karen Sue Hodella a beautician from Port Orange Florida who was visiting a boyfriend of hers at the time After spending some time at local bars the pair found themselves at an apartment complex in New Albany They argued over some prescription medication that Gibson had supposedly stolen Angered by the accusations Gibson punched Hodella in the face then took out a pocket knife and stabbed her multiple times in the throat before driving around and dumping her body in Clarksville Soon after the murder he had a tattoo inscribed on his lower right arm indicating the date of the murder accompanied by an image of a knife 5 Hodella s badly decomposed body was found on January 7 2003 and identified via thumbprints from a previous arrest Three weeks after the murder Gibson was arrested for driving a GMC truck while drunk After going through a four day withdrawal he was examined by the prison s psychiatrist Dr Daniel Howerton 4 While Gibson complained of frequent headaches stomachaches insomnia and hypochondriasis Howerton and the prison s mental therapist concluded that he suffered from mild anxiety and had indications of anti social behavior but was otherwise sane In May 2003 Gibson sued the prison authorities claiming that they had improperly denied him access to Seroquel and for housing him in squalid conditions but the suit was thrown out by a federal judge who considered it baseless 4 After being released from jail Gibson continued hanging around bars but on February 21 2006 he stole the purse and 300 from a female acquaintance Her husband tracked down Gibson s brown Toyota and had him arrested for theft with Gibson serving a 3 year sentence until he was released circa Independence Day in 2009 4 During that time he found a job at C amp C Hardwood Flooring in Borden where he was described as a diligent worker and was regarded positively by friends and neighbors for attending the local non denominational Power of the Cross church making papier mache figures and for helping his sick mother on the other hand patrons of the bars he frequented considered him strange and on at least a few occasions he had asked out women to visit his home to varying success 4 Gibson eventually stopped attending church altogether in late August 2011 when his mother was admitted into a nursing home She passed away at Floyd Memorial Hospital on January 18 2012 with some neighbors suspecting that her death greatly impacted Gibson s psyche On March 24 that year he met 35 year old Stephanie Marie Kirk at the Uptown Bar in New Albany where he arranged to take her on a motorcycle ride After spending the day doing drugs and having sex the pair returned to Gibson s house where they argued over some pills 6 In his anger Gibson proceeded to rape and strangle her sexually assaulted her body breaking her back in the process and then burying her body in his backyard 7 On April 18 he was visited by a 75 year old friend of his late mother Christine Whitis The latter had always supported Gibson and even gave him money He raped and strangled her before mutilating her corpse cutting one of her breasts off Then he left the body on the garage floor surrounded by garbage bags Arrest trials and imprisonment EditOn the following day one of Gibson s sisters went to their mother s house to settle the division of the family estate and after checking the garage and finding Whitis body she immediately notified the police 8 Later that day Gibson was arrested for drunk driving in Whitis car and was charged with her murder five days later A few days later he confessed responsibility for Hodella s murder 9 He also willingly led them to the location where he had buried her body and on April 27 authorities dug up her body from his backyard On May 23 Gibson was officially charged with her murder as well with prosecutors announcing that they would seek the death penalty for all three killings 10 During his murder trial prosecutors presented an interview Gibson had given to investigators upon his arrest during which he claimed that an evil had overcome him and had made him commit the murder 11 On October 25 2013 Gibson was found guilty in Whitis murder at a jury trial with the jurors taking less than 20 minutes to find him guilty on all charges 12 At his sentencing the following month Gibson was subsequently handed a death sentence to which he told the sentencing judge that it was no big deal and that he deserved what he was getting 13 In regards to his upcoming murder trials he changed his plea and waived his right to a speedy trial choosing to plead guilty to Hodella s murder instead As part of the deal it was decided that evidence presented at the Hodella trial would not be used as evidence or an aggravating factor in any follow up trials 14 A substantial issue arose when Gibson had a tattoo done on the back of his shaved head which said Death Row X3 According to Justice Susan Orth the tattoo could prejudice the jury and possibly prevent a fair trial and because of this prison authorities were forbidden from cutting Gibson s hair so the tattoo could be covered up 5 At this final murder trial Gibson unexpectedly pleaded guilty again waiving his right to a jury trial 15 In spite of the guilty plea prosecutors pushed for another death sentence aiming to prove aggravating factors during the commission of Kirk s murder 6 On August 15 2014 Gibson was sentenced to death again with sentencing Justice Orth deeming that it was the only appropriate sentence in regards to the brutal killing 16 Aftermath EditSince his incarceration Gibson has repeatedly appealed his death sentences with his defense lawyer claiming that his confession to the Kirk murder was a mitigating circumstance 17 These appeals were rejected by the Indiana Supreme Court which reaffirmed all of his convictions 18 In 2018 he was among several death row inmates to be featured in the documentary Inside Death Row hosted by British journalist Trevor McDonald 19 Gibson has also done several interviews on various podcasts on which he has professed responsibility for an additional 30 murders committed across multiple states additionally claiming that he has sexually abused and even cannibalized the victims corpses Among the murders he has confessed to is the 2000 murder of Elizabeth Banister who was stabbed to death at her home in Evansville but so far he has not been charged with her murder 20 See also EditCapital punishment in Indiana List of death row inmates in Indiana List of serial killers in the United StatesReferences Edit Andrew Wolfson Harold J Adams and Jason Riley June 17 2012 Is This The Face of a Serial Killer The Courier Journal p A1 via Newspapers com a b c d e f g Andrew Wolfson Harold J Adams and Jason Riley June 17 2012 Is This The Face of a Serial Killer The Courier Journal p A6 via Newspapers com a b c Remains from Ind man s yard identified Journal amp Courier April 29 2012 via Newspapers com a b c d e f g h Andrew Wolfson Harold J Adams and Jason Riley June 17 2012 Is This The Face of a Serial Killer The Courier Journal p A7 via Newspapers com a b Gibson guilty again The Courier Journal March 21 2014 p A11 via Newspapers com a b Grace Schneider July 29 2014 Gibson victim s back broken The Courier Journal p A12 via Newspapers com Grace Schneider July 29 2014 Gibson victim s back broken The Courier Journal p A3 via Newspapers com Clarksville woman s death was homicide The Courier Journal April 23 2012 via Newspapers com S Indiana man charged in killings decade apart Tipton County Tribune April 25 2012 via Newspapers com Bruce Schreiner and Rick Callahan May 24 2014 New Albany man charged with murdering third woman The Herald via Newspapers com Charlie White October 21 2013 William Clyde Gibson s first murder trial opens elderly victim called his prey The Indianapolis Star Archived from the original on July 28 2021 Retrieved March 13 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Jury finds Indiana man guilty of killing woman The Progress Index October 26 2013 via Newspapers com Death sentence ordered for woman s slaying The Republic November 27 2013 via Newspapers com Gibson guilty again The Courier Journal March 21 2014 p A3 via Newspapers com Evansville man pleads guilty to 3rd murder The Tribune June 4 2014 via Newspapers com Baylee Pulliam August 16 2014 Serial killer Gibson gets 2nd death sentence The Cincinnati Enquirer via Newspapers com Convicted in 3 deaths William Clyde Gibson challenges 1 of his death sentences The Indianapolis Star December 10 2015 Archived from the original on October 26 2020 Retrieved November 7 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Dave Stafford October 24 2019 Supreme Court reaffirms death sentence in brutal 2012 2003 murders The Indiana Lawyer Archived from the original on March 12 2022 Rebecca Nicholson February 2 2018 Death Row 2018 with Trevor McDonald review clear eyed detachment from the veteran journalist The Guardian Archived from the original on June 15 2018 Retrieved June 18 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Bob Gaetjens September 14 2020 Aurora native s podcast aims to gain trust of serial killers Record Courier Archived from the original on October 19 2021 Retrieved March 13 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link External links EditIndiana Inmate Locator archived Gibson v Indiana 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Clyde Gibson amp oldid 1136006005, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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