Wednesday, March 9, 2016

010908 dash cam video of Gary Hilton


insert

http://www.gainesvilletimes.com/archives/2823/

Hilton warrant wasn’t in database

He could have been jailed in November


POSTED: January 30, 2008 5:04 a.m
 A federal judge in Gainesville signed a warrant for Gary Hilton's arrest last February, but when U.S. Forest officials in Florida stopped his van in November, they found no record of the warrant.
Within two weeks of that traffic stop in the Apalachicola National Forest, a woman Hilton is suspected of killing vanished, later turning up decapitated.
Hilton was stopped at least twice by authorities last year, but never arrested, because the warrant U.S. Magistrate Susan Cole signed was considered so minor it was never entered into a national database.
Now Hilton, 61, is charged in the abduction and murder of 24-year-old Meredith Emerson and a suspect in similar cases in Leon County, Fla., and Transylvania County, N.C.
The only outstanding warrant Hilton had prior to his arrest this month stemmed from his failure to move an abandoned Chevy Astro van that was parked at the end of a wilderness road at the base of Tray Mountain in White County.
White County Sheriff's Sgt. Phil Dalenberg said his office got complaints in December 2005 about the broken-down van. After running the tag on the van, Dalenberg tracked down Hilton through his employer at a Chamblee siding business, who gave the deputy Hilton's cell phone number.
Dalenberg said Hilton was told to move the van or an arrest warrant would be issued for abandoned personal property.
"He said he was going to make an agreement with a towing company, and was going to give them the title," Dalenberg said. "It just never happened."
On Nov. 13, 2006, U.S. Forest Service Ranger Jimmy Allen wrote the ticket for abandoned property, which was mailed to the only address authorities had on record, Hilton's work place.
When Hilton, who authorities say lived mostly out of his cars, did not answer the citation, Cole signed a bench warrant for failure to appear in court on Feb. 8, 2007.
The standard language of the form reads, "to any United States Marshal or other authorized officers: you are hereby commanded to arrest and bring the above named defendant forthwith before the nearest available United States Magistrate Judge to answer to the above stated charge."
Yet, because the underlying offense was a federal misdemeanor, the warrant was not entered into the National Crime Information Center, a law enforcement database that tracks outstanding state and federal arrest warrants. Law officers routinely run a person's information through NCIC in any traffic stop. Georgia officers also run the information through the state database, GCIC.
Hilton had two encounters late last year with law enforcement: the first in Cherokee County in October, when a deputy responded to a complaint of Hilton squatting in a private hunting preserve; the second on Nov. 17, when U.S. Forest officials stopped his van in the Apalachicola National Forest.
Hilton's name was cleared through the databases each time.
Someone wearing a mask used the ATM card of 46-year-old Cheryl Dunlap three times between Dec. 1 and Dec. 4, Leon County, Fla., sheriff's officials said. They consider Hilton the prime suspect in Dunlap's abduction and murder Her body was discovered in the Apalachicola National Forest on Dec. 15.
Richard Mecum, the U.S. Marshal for the Northern District of Georgia, said the warrant signed by Cole was not entered into NCIC because it was too minor. The offense would have to be something that would make the government willing to extradite a defendant if he were stopped in another state, Mecum said.
"I don't know that the federal government would extradite on a misdemeanor," Mecum said. "In NCIC, you're looking primarily at felonies, or cases in which sheriffs are willing to extradite."
The federal warrant system stands in contrast to the state system. Anyone who has an outstanding bench warrant in Georgia, regardless of the underlying offense, would be in the GCIC system, said Hall County Sheriff's Maj. Jeff Strickland. If the warrant showed up during a traffic stop, they would be arrested, he said.
But Strickland noted that in some minor offenses, defendants can post a nominal bond amount and be out of jail within a day.
Mecum said he has no problem with the way NCIC excludes some federal offenses.
"You can burden the system with all kinds of warrants," Mecum said, adding, "you could have 20-20 hindsight."
When Hilton was the subject of an intense manhunt earlier this month in Emerson's disappearance, it was the federal warrant that Cole signed in February that authorities used to hold him until more serious charges could be brought. The warrant may never be disposed of now.
"I think there's some things with a lot more priority ahead of it," Mecum said.

--------------------

Dashcam Video Shows Gary Hilton | www.wsbtv.com

Dashcam Video Shows Gary Hilton | www.wsbtv.com

After the deputy ran Hilton’s ID and found no warrants on him, he let him leave. Hilton can be heard saying as he drives away, “Hey, I love ya,” to the deputy. - See more at: http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:Fc9GQs8TW18J:www.wsbtv.com/news/news/dashcam-video-shows-gary-hilton/nJRFm/+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us#sthash.7thQ3ocw.dpuf
After the deputy ran Hilton’s ID and found no warrants on him, he let him leave. Hilton can be heard saying as he drives away, “Hey, I love ya,” to the deputy. - See more at: http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:Fc9GQs8TW18J:www.wsbtv.com/news/news/dashcam-video-shows-gary-hilton/nJRFm/+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us#sthash.7thQ3ocw.dpuf


insert video
--------------------


-------------------

http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:Fc9GQs8TW18J:www.wsbtv.com/news/news/dashcam-video-shows-gary-hilton/nJRFm/+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us

Previous Stories: January 8, 2008: Autopsy: Blunt Force Trauma Killed Hiker
January 7, 2008: No Bond For Emerson Kidnap Suspect
January 7, 2008: Hiker's Father Makes Plea For Help
January 7, 2008: Kidnapping Suspect In Court Today
January 5, 2008: Police Charge Hilton With Kidnapping Hiker
January 5, 2008: Police: Missing Hiker Likely Dead; Suspect Charged
January 5, 2008: 'Person Of Interest,' Missing Hiker's Dog Found
- See more at:
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:Fc9GQs8TW18J:www.wsbtv.com/news/news/dashcam-video-shows-gary-hilton/nJRFm/+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us#sthash.7thQ3ocw.dpuf
VIDEO: Dashcam Video Shows Gary Hilton


The video shows Hilton telling Ballard he was a former
paratrooper. “What I’m doing now is I’m on perpetual field maneuvers,”
said Hilton. Hilton also told the deputy hunters had warned him if he
stayed there he could get shot. “I’m leaving. I’m getting out of here,
God almighty!”

Hilton was camping down two miles of dirt roads.
Ballard checked Hilton out carefully, noticing a fanny pack and asked if
he had any weapons. “Absolutely not and I’m gonna bring it to you,”
Hilton said. After the deputy persisted, Hilton told the deputy he had
an expandable baton and not to get nervous.

Investigators found a baton near where Emerson disappeared.


- See more at:
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:Fc9GQs8TW18J:www.wsbtv.com/news/news/dashcam-video-shows-gary-hilton/nJRFm/+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us#sthash.7thQ3ocw.dpuf

SERIAL KILLER GARY HILTON UPDATE-Fred Rosen 11/01 by True Murder | Books Podcasts

SERIAL KILLER GARY HILTON UPDATE-Fred Rosen 11/01 by True Murder | Books Podcasts

Gary Michael Hilton once sold his movie idea to Hollywood. The straight-to-video Deadly Run was about a man who captures women only to set them free on his very private and secluded Georgia land so that he can hunt and kill them.

In 2007 (at least, that's the earliest investigators have been able to prove), he brought Hollywood to life when he began using state parks as his own personal hunting grounds.

 
Convicted of murder and sentenced to death-it would seem the case was not closed. Rosen was commissioned by the Atlanta Journal Constitution to write a front page piece for their Sunday section on the real time-line of Meredith Emerson's murder which is covered in his book Trails of Death. Rosen was denied information and now realizes the timeline in the book is wrong. Emerson should probably still be alive. The truth never came out and Rosen is pursuing the story. TRAILS OF DEATH UPDATE-Fred Rosen.

Trail of Death: The Hunt for Gary Hilton Part III | The Lineup

Trail of Death: The Hunt for Gary Hilton Part III | The Lineup

Trail of Death: The Hunt for Gary Hilton Part III

He stalked the remote hiking trails of the southern United States, leaving a trail of death in his wake ...
Trail of Death: The Hunt for Gary Hilton Part III From 2007 to 2008, Gary Hilton stalked the backcountry paths of national parks throughout the southern United States, leaving a trail of death in his wake.
In 2008, he was finally brought to justice. But the case of the man they called the National Forest Serial Killer was far from closed.
True crime writer Fred Rosen, author of Trails of Death: The True Story of National Forest Serial Killer Gary Hiltonreturns with the final installment to his three-part exclusive on the hunt for Gary Hilton.

RELATED: TRAIL OF DEATH: THE HUNT FOR GARY HILTON PART I


Gary Hilton had avoided a death sentence in Georgia because authorities, and the family of his fourth victim, Meredith Emerson, were desperate to find the twenty-four-year-old’s body. So they struck a deal with the killer. If he agreed to lead authorities to her body, Hilton would avoid the death penalty, receiving life in prison.
Hilton acquiesced.
Irene Bryant, Hilton’s first victim, had been killed on federal land, Pisgah National Forest, in Transylvania County, North Carolina. His third victim, Cheryl Dunlap, had also been killed on federal land, in the Apalachicola National Forest, located in Florida’s Leon County.

RELATED: TRAIL OF DEATH: THE HUNT FOR GARY HILTON PART II

Authorities suspected that Irene’s husband, John Bryant, abducted alongside Irene in 2007, was Hilton’s second victim. As of January 2008, however, John was still missing.
With the Georgia deal signed, sealed, and delivered, the question then became who would next indict Hilton: Florida or the federal government?
gary hilton
Sheriff David Mahoney of North Carolina’s Transylvania County had the answer. While he jostled with the U.S. Attorney over who had jurisdiction to prosecute Hilton for Irene Bryant’s murder, he spoke to me.
“Well, Florida does have a fast track on the death penalty, doesn’t it,” he mused.
It was a question of odds.
From 1976 to 2007, the federal government had executed just three people on capital murder charges. In that same period, Florida had put sixty-four people to death, averaging two a year.

RELATED: HENRY LEE LUCAS: THE CONFESSION KILLER

On February 2, 2008, the skeletal remains of John Bryant were recovered in Nantahala National Forest in North Carolina. The incentive to get Hilton to the Sunshine State for a death penalty showdown picked up steam. Hilton was successfully extradited to Florida, where he would soon stand trial for the murder of forty-six-year-old Cheryl Dunlap.
The Florida Department of Law Enforcement had found and identified Dunlap’s body, sans fingers and head. As in the Emerson case, Hilton had mutilated the body in a desperate attempt to obscure identification; it didn’t work. Forensic analysts used a portion of Dunlap’s thigh muscle to identify her.
gary hiltonThe fire pit where Gary Hilton tried to dispose of Dunlap’s remains
Like all death penalty cases, Hilton’s wound its way through pre-trial motions. I was there for all of it, and as the case progressed, I began thinking about the man himself. Was Hilton, the third 60-year-old serial killer in United States history, a natural born killer or had he been twisted into one?
I hit the road to Hialeah, Florida, where Gary Hilton lived as a teenager. I met up with Hilton’s childhood friend Dino Sclafani, who took me to their old haunts and reminisced about the good times he shared with his old buddy.
Another high school friend told me about the time he and Hilton played together in a band. Hilton showed genuine talent, he said. I tracked down one of Hilton’s old sweethearts as well, who had a far darker tale to tell. She told me that Hilton once confessed to an incestuous relationship with his mother while he was a boy.

RELATED: HE WAS THE FIRST KILLER CAUGHT USING DNA EVIDENCE

In February 2011, after two years of pre-trial hearings, Hilton stood before a judge at a Tallahassee courtroom. At the end of the four-week trial, the jury convicted Hilton of first-degree murder and recommended he be put to death.
The judge agreed, and officially pronounced the death sentence.
In the wake of the trial and sentencing, Dateline NBC did a two-hour investigation into Hilton and the trail of death he cut across the southern United States. I was interviewed for the show. It seemed as if the Hilton case was finally closed, but it wasn’t.
gary hiltonBone fragments presented during Hilton’s trial
January 19, 2016: Hilton was due in Tallahassee for a hearing, where he planned to request a new trial on the basis of inadequate counsel.
He never made it.
Instead, on January 12, the United States Supreme Court delivered a decision that changed the rules of the game for Florida’s death penalty statute.
The challenge came from the case of Florida man Timothy Lee Hurst. Hurst was convicted in the 1998 murder of his co-worker, Cynthia Harrison. A Florida penalty-phase jury convicted Hurst of the crime, and recommended that the judge impose a death sentence. The judge agreed and sentenced Hurst to death.

RELATED: THE CLEVELAND TORSO MURDERER

Hurst’s lawyers challenged the decision and brought the case before the Supreme Court. In January 2016, Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor delivered the opinion of the Court.
“We hold this sentencing scheme unconstitutional. The Sixth Amendment requires a jury, not a judge, to find each fact necessary to impose a sentence of death. A jury’s mere recommendation is not enough,” Sotomayor wrote.
Suddenly, all executions in Florida, including Hilton’s, were put on hold.
“We are currently waiting on the Florida Supreme Court to rule in the Hurst case, ” says Georgia Cappleman, the prosecutor who convicted Hilton. “They have to decide whether Hurst is retroactive,” she continued, though she and others do not believe it is.
GaryHilton_trialHilton in a Florida courtroom
In the event that Florida rules otherwise, and the Hurst decision is retroactive, the whole death penalty scheme in Florida will be set asunder. Sentences would be scrapped, and all prisoners on Death Row—including Hilton—would be subject to re-sentencing.
The Florida legislature is currently drafting a new law in accordance with the U.S. Supreme Court decision, and what the Florida Supreme Court will decide this February.
“We are trying to delay prosecuting new death penalty cases. If we have to, we will postpone the penalty phase until the legislature gives us a new scheme,” Cappleman told me.
As for Hilton? He’s back in prison, watching and waiting. At the moment, he has all the time in the world.

Trail of Death: The Hunt for Gary Hilton Part II | The Lineup

Trail of Death: The Hunt for Gary Hilton Part II | The Lineup

Trail of Death: The Hunt for Gary Hilton Part II

He stalked the remote hiking trails of the southern United States, leaving a trail of death in his wake ...
Trail of Death: The Hunt for Gary Hilton Part II From 2007 to 2008, Gary Hilton stalked the backcountry paths of national parks throughout the southern United States, leaving a trail of death in his wake.
But the crimes of the man they called called the National Forest Serial Killer were about to come to a crashing end.
True crime writer Fred Rosen, author of Trails of Death: The True Story of National Forest Serial Killer Gary Hiltonreturns with the second installment of his three-part exclusive on the hunt for Gary Hilton through the forests of North Carolina, Florida, and Georgia.

RELATED: TRAIL OF DEATH: THE HUNT FOR GARY HILTON PART I


In 2005, roughly two years before he claimed his first victim, serial killer Gary Hilton abandoned a van in the Tray Mountain area of White County, Georgia. He received a citation for doing so, but didn’t answer it. A warrant for his arrest was issued and put into the Federal database.
Here’s the thing about serial killers: They don’t just start murdering in their 60s. Something has to set them off, or seriously disturb their day-to-day lives.
The worst you could say about Hilton before he committed murder was that he was a conman and petty thief. But that all changed when a Georgia physician prescribed him Ritalin, despite the fact he did not suffer from ADD.
GaryHilton_vanSerial killer Gary Hilton’s Dodge Astro Van
In Georgia, Hilton had worked for years as a “tin man” for John Tabor, who ran a home siding business in the Atlanta area. Tabor not only employed Hilton, he provided him a home on one of his properties. Soon after Hilton began taking Ritalin, which acts as a stimulant for those without ADD, his demeanor changed. He grew irritable and confrontational, acted out, even threatened Tabor with violence. It wasn’t long before Hilton lost his job and his home on Tabor’s property.

RELATED: 7 DISTURBING BOOKS ABOUT SERIAL KILLERS

Cut loose, Hilton hit the road in his Chevy Astro van with Dandy, his dog and ever-present companion, popping Ritalin as he went. Hilton preferred national parks, and so he headed north, leaving Georgia in 2007 and entering North Carolina’s Pisgah National Park. How he came to befriend Irene and John Bryant, senior citizens married for 55 years, is unknown.
gary hiltonA murder weapon used by Gary Hilton
What is known is that shortly after the couple went hiking on October 20, 2007, they disappeared. Someone used the couple’s ATM card at a bank 75 miles away. Irene turned up dead roughly three weeks later on November 9, her skull fractured in multiple places. John remained missing. His body wouldn’t be found until 2008.
Hilton, meanwhile, left North Carolina, driving south into Georgia. He stopped to set up camp on a private hunting preserve in Cherokee County. A local noticed his presence and called police to make a complaint; a deputy drove out to kick Hilton off the property. Upon arrival, the deputy ran Hilton’s license through a state database; no outstanding warrants in the Peach State. At the time, there was no requirement that the license be run through the Federal database, so it wasn’t.

RELATED: BUSTED: HOW 5 INFAMOUS SERIAL KILLERS WERE FINALLY CAUGHT

If Hilton’s license had been checked at the federal level, the deputy would have caught his outstanding warrant for that unanswered citation from 2005. Hilton would have been arrested there and then, two people would be alive, and this article would stop right here.
Sadly, nothing of the sort took place. The deputy told Hilton to pack up his gear and clear out. He was free to go.
gary hiltonCheryl Dunlap, one of Hilton’s victims
Leaving Cherokee County, Hilton drove south, crossing into Florida and entering the Apalachicola National Forest outside Tallahassee by the middle of November. Despite another run-in with a park service officer on November 17, Hilton was let go with a warning not to exceed the park’s 14-day camping limit. And once again, his name was not cross-referenced in a federal database for outstanding warrants.

RELATED: 11 HAUNTED FORESTS YOU SHOULD NEVER, EVER STEP FOOT IN

The details surrounding Hilton’s abduction of 46-year-old nurse Cheryl Dunlap on December 1, 2007 in the Apalachicola National Forest remain a mystery. Just five feet four inches, Dunlap had thick wavy brown hair, brown eyes, and thin lips. She was a mother and devoted member of the evangelical Christian River of Life Church. Soon after her disappearance, Cheryl’s car was found with a flat tire on Crawfordville Highway parked just outside the park’s entrance. She may have been attempting to flag someone down for assistance when Hilton came upon her.
gary hiltonThe mask used by Hilton while withdrawing money from the bank accounts of his victims
A few days after the discovery of Cheryl’s car, security camera footage surfaced of a man in a rubber mask attempting to use Dunlap’s bankcard at area ATMs. Then on December 15, Apalachicola park rangers noticed buzzards picking over a large carcass. They realized it was the body of a woman as they grew closer, with gaping wounds on the torso and legs. Then they noticed what wasn’t there: Both hands had been cut off, and the head was missing.
The body would eventually be identified as the missing Cheryl Dunlap.

RELATED: WHO KILLED CAROLYN COLLINS?

While authorities scoured the area for clues to their killer, Hilton hit the road. By the end of 2007, he was back in Georgia, just in time for New Year’s Eve.
On January 1, 2008, Hilton and Dandy set out for a hike on Blood Mountain outside of Atlanta. That’s when he ran into Meredith Emerson, who was also enjoying a New Year’s Day trek with her dog.
Hilton tried abducting her, but the martial arts-trained Emerson resisted. A powerful 24-year-old, Emerson put up a good fight. But Hilton, trained in hand-to-hand combat from his days in the Army, eventually got the better of her. Once subdued, he marched her down the mountain to his van.
gary hiltonMeredith Emerson’s wallet
Inside, he tied Emerson down, drove away and held her prisoner for days. This time, however, Hilton failed to clean up his trail. Other witnesses had seen them on the mountain that day. They alerted authorities and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation soon identified Hilton as the primary suspect in Emerson’s abduction. Police continued to scour Blood Mountain, despite the fact that attempts to use Emerson’s bankcard had been made at ATMs many miles away.

RELATED: THE SERIAL KILLER NEXT DOOR: SAM SMITHERS

News of the abduction went national. It soon caught the attention of John Tabor, Hilton’s former boss at the siding business. When Hilton called him to ask for money, Tabor knew Hilton was the prime suspect in Emerson’s disappearance. Strangely, Tabor waited over an hour to inform the Georgia Bureau of Investigation about the call.
Authorities were able to trace it to a pancake house off of Blood Mountain. By the time they arrived, however, Hilton was gone.
gary hiltonGary Hilton’s cluttered van
A few days later, in DeKalb County, Hilton was spotted in a parking lot, removing items out of his van and tossing them into a dumpster. A phone call was made.
“The guy you’re looking for is cleaning out his van,” the witness told police in a 911 call.
DeKalb County deputies rushed to the scene, their sirens screaming and dome lights flashing. This time, Hilton didn’t have time to escape. He offered no resistance as police put him into custody. Soon, Hilton found himself in an interview room, turned over to the GBI. He readily admitted to killing Emerson, speaking in bursts. He was looking to make a deal.

RELATED: WHO KILLED PEARL BRYAN AND WHERE IS HER HEAD?

In exchange for a full confession and leading Georgia police to Emerson’s body, Hilton would get life in prison without possibility of parole. He did just that. Under heavy escort, Hilton led authorities to a remote road in Dawson Forest, 35.7 miles south of Blood Mountain, where he had buried Emerson’s body. Clearly, the GBI had been looking for Emerson in the wrong place. Just like Dunlap’s corpse, the head was gone. I buried it nearby, Hilton told police. He had beheaded Emerson in an attempt to obscure identification.
As Georgia authorities pieced together the murder of Meredith Emerson, Florida law enforcement officers were connecting the dots between Emerson and Dunlap; their killer was the same guy. But unlike Georgia, Florida was not going to make a deal.
***

Join us next week for the concluding installment of Trail of Death: The Hunt for Gary Hilton

Trail of Death: The Hunt for Gary Hilton Part I | The Lineup

Trail of Death: The Hunt for Gary Hilton Part I | The Lineup

Trail of Death: The Hunt for Gary Hilton Part I

He stalked the remote hiking trails of the southern United States, leaving a trail of death in his wake...
Trail of Death: The Hunt for Gary Hilton Part I They called him the National Forest Serial Killer. Between 2007 and 2008, Gary Hilton stalked the backcountry paths of the southern United States, leaving a trail of death in his wake: the 2007 slaying of John and Irene Bryant in North Carolina’s Pisgah National Forest, the 2007 slaying of Cheryl Dunlap in Florida’s Apalachicola National Forest, and the 2008 slaying of Meredith Emerson in Georgia’s Chattahoochee National Forest.
True crime writer Fred Rosen knows all about Gary Hilton. He tracked the killer for years while writing his bookTrails of Death: The True Story of National Forest Serial Killer Gary Hilton. Now Rosen brings the hunt for Gary Hilton to life in this thrilling three-part investigation, published exclusively on The Lineup.

In Florida, if you kill somebody, they give you a million dollar defense with all kinds of experts, then the jury convicts you and the judge sentences you to death.
That’s what happened in February 2010, when convicted serial killer Gary Hilton first came to trial. I was there for all of it. It was the first and only time I have been in a courtroom where a judge pronounced death on someone. It was quite emotional for me, because by then, I had backtracked Hilton from birth to the present. I knew the human potential that had been squandered, and the human lives that were lost.
GaryHilton_trialHilton in a Florida courtroom
Hilton’s 2010 death sentence should have been the end of his case—but it wasn’t. Flash forward to January 19, 2016. Death row inmate Gary Hilton was supposed to stand before a judge in Tallahassee, this time requesting a new trial on the basis of inadequate counsel.

RELATED: CARNIE KILLERS: THE MURDER TRIAL OF LOBSTER BOY

But by a vote of 8-1, the Supreme Court stuck down Florida’s death penalty statute, requiring the state legislature to rewrite it. Suddenly, Hilton had a reprieve.
Justice has a funny way of working out—even for a killer as dangerous as Hilton.
***
In 1963, a seventeen-year-old Gary Hilton enlisted in the U.S. Army. He was sent to West Germany, and assigned to the Davy Crockett Platoon—named after the coonskin cap-wearing King of the Wild Frontier. Crockett had been a hero to kids like Hilton growing up in the 1950’s.
There were nineteen men in the special platoon. Their task? Simple. Direct and deploy the Davy Crockett missile, an XM-388 nuclear projectile launched from either a 120 millimeter (XM-28) or 155 millimeter (M-29) recoil-less rifle.

RELATED: “I SPEAK FOR THE DEAD”

According to the Brookings Institution, it was the smallest and lightest nuclear weapon ever developed by the United States military, designed for use against Soviet troop formations.
With a maximum range of 1.24 miles, the Army’s brilliant idea was to arrange these units armed with hand-held nuclear weapons across West Germany, establishing an impenetrable perimeter against an armed Soviet insurgence. If the Soviets appeared on the horizon, word would, supposedly, go up the line to the President of the United States, who would then make the decision whether to fire or not.
gary hiltonA photo of the nuclear rockets issued to the Davy Crockett Platoon
The members of the Davy Crockett Platoon were supposed to be carefully screened for psychological fitness. How, then, did Hilton get in?
The Army didn’t seem to mind that earlier in 1959, when he was thirteen-years-old, Hilton had shot Nilo DeBag, his stepfather, who in Gary’s mind had taken away his mother. That first time he tried to kill another human being, Hilton failed. He only wounded DeBag and not mortally. DeBag, it seemed, was a forgiving man. He decided to give his stepson a second chance and refused to press charges. Hilton was briefly confined to a mental hospital for the attack and then released, eventually making his way into the Davy Crockett Platoon.
In truth, being a member was a suicide mission. The Davy Crockett soldiers would be blown to hell and back if they ever fired the nuclear-tipped missile. And perhaps it was precisely this stress that caused Hilton to crack up while serving.

RELATED: TED BUNDY: A BRUSH WITH PURE EVIL

A few years into his service, Hilton began hearing voices, and soon suffered a full-blown schizophrenic breakdown. The Army put him into a mental hospital, where he was drugged up on Thorazine. Rather than give him a Section 8 psychiatric discharge, the Army chose to give him an honorable discharge instead. He was released from the Army in 1967, at the age of twenty-oneThere’s no record that any Army personnel followed Hilton into civilian life, to see how he functioned in society.
Hilton was a good-looking guy; he was a long distance runner, and, according to some tests, possessed a genius-level IQ.
But whether it was Hilton’s painful childhood, his deteriorating mental state, or the lingering trauma of a childhood injury that left Hilton partially scalped, the man just couldn’t sustain a relationship or keep a good job. He bounced around the South throughout the 1970s and 80s. At the dawn of the millennium, after burning through multiple marriages and jobs, Hilton found himself in Atlanta, Georgia, working as a roofer at the age of fifty-four.
GaryHilton_vanSerial Killer Gary Hilton’s Dodge Astro Van
If Hilton had one passion, one comfort that offset the instability of his professional and personal life, it was the outdoors. In 2007, he and his ever-present companion, dog Dandy, hit the road in his Dodge Astro van. They drove north, leaving the state of Georgia and crossing into North Carolina, to the Pisgah National Forest just outside of Asheville.

RELATED: 8 BODIES IN THE ATTIC: THE TRUE CRIMES OF SERIAL KILLER KENDALL FRANCOIS

It was here that Gary Hilton first encountered senior citizens Irene and John Bryant while on a hike through a remote section of the park. And it was here, among the old-growth trees of the Appalachian wilderness, that Hilton decided to murder them.
***

Join us next week for the second installment of Trail of Death: The Hunt for Gary Hilton