Oscar Ray Bolin Jr. (January 22, 1962 – January 7, 2016) was an American serial killer and convicted rapist who was executed in Florida for murder. In 1986, Bolin kidnapped and murdered three young women in Tampa, Florida. He was later connected to a fourth murder in Texas in 1987. The murders went unsolved for nearly four years, until the husband of his ex-wife called a tip line and implicated him. He maintained his innocence to the end.
Early life
Bolin was born on January 22, 1962, in Portland, Indiana.
His family consisted of laborers and carnival workers who were spread across
multiple states including: Florida, Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio. His father used
to beat him when he was a child and his mother once walked him to a school bus
stop on a leash.
Bolin frequently got into trouble with the law during his
youth. In 1977, he committed theft in Ohio at the age of 15 and was arrested.
He later moved to Florida in the early 1980s and began working as a carnival
worker.
In 1982, his girlfriend, Cheryl Haffner, told authorities Bolin had kidnapped her and driven
her around the Tampa Bay area for hours. He was arrested for false imprisonment,
but the charge was dropped.
In 1983, the two were married in Hillsborough County,
Florida.
Murders
On January 25, 1986, 25-year-old Natalie Blanche Holley, a night manager at a Church's Fried Chicken
restaurant in Tampa, finished work and locked up the store for the night with a
colleague. She left the store around 1:30 a.m. and headed to her car. Her body
was found hours later by a morning jogger. She had been stabbed to death.
On November 5, 1986, 17-year-old Stephanie Collins, a Chamberlain High School student, disappeared
after finishing her shift at a drug store. On December 5, 1986, her body was
found wrapped in sheets and towels. She had been stabbed to death and her skull
was also crushed.
The same day Collins' body was found, 26-year-old Teri Lynn Matthews went missing. Her
car was found outside a post office with the engine still running. Her body was
located later that day in some woods, wrapped in a white sheet. Her throat had
been cut and she had been bludgeoned.
Investigation
In 1987, Bolin and two other men kidnapped and raped a
20-year-old waitress in Toledo, Ohio. Afterward, Bolin attempted to kill her
with a gun, but the gun jammed. He let the woman go along a highway in
Pennsylvania. Bolin was captured and was sentenced to 22 to 75 years in prison.
In 1989, Haffner divorced Bolin and later remarried. She
told her new husband that Bolin had told her about committing multiple murders.
Haffner's new husband then called a tip line and implicated Bolin. More
witnesses then came out to testify against him, including his younger half-brother
and a cousin.
Haffner testified that she had been with Bolin before he
kidnapped Holley and had helped him dispose of some evidence. Bolin's
half-brother testified that he watched Bolin beat Matthews and attempt to drown
her with a garden hose.
Bolin's cousin confessed to aiding Bolin in abducting
30-year-old Deborah Diane Stowe
outside a convenience store in Greenville, Texas, in 1987. He testified that
Bolin had raped and strangled the woman. Texas prosecutors declined to seek an indictment
in the case because Bolin was already charged with multiple murders in Florida.
Bolin was found guilty and was sentenced to death in July
1991 for the murder of Holley. He was later sentenced to death again for the
murder of Collins and received a third death sentence for the murder of
Matthews.
Execution
Bolin was interviewed by WTVT on the day before his
execution. When talking about his upcoming execution, Bolin continued to claim
he was innocent and had been framed, and described his execution as a release
from his punishment, having been locked up in prison for the past 28 years.
Bolin was executed by lethal injection at 10:16 p.m. EST on
January 7, 2016. He was the first person to be executed in the United States in
2016. His last meal consisted of a rib-eye steak, a baked potato, salad, garlic
bread, lemon meringue pie, and Coca-Cola. He declined to make a final
statement. The next execution in Florida did not occur until over nineteen
months later when Mark Asay was
executed for the murders of two men in Jacksonville.
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