Draft:Murder of Robert Piest
Submission declined on 10 June 2024 by PARAKANYAA (talk). this is a (mostly, see Talk:John Wayne Gacy) undiscussed content split from John Wayne Gacy. in addition large portions of it have no citations. as a split, since it's already covered on gacy's article there's no point to having this article unless it is already well written and covers ground the main page doesn't have - the article topic could possibly have an independent article, if it was well written and comprehensive, but as it isn't.
Where to get help
How to improve a draft
You can also browse Wikipedia:Featured articles and Wikipedia:Good articles to find examples of Wikipedia's best writing on topics similar to your proposed article. Improving your odds of a speedy review To improve your odds of a faster review, tag your draft with relevant WikiProject tags using the button below. This will let reviewers know a new draft has been submitted in their area of interest. For instance, if you wrote about a female astronomer, you would want to add the Biography, Astronomy, and Women scientists tags. Editor resources
|
Submission declined on 15 May 2024 by Shadow311 (talk). The content of this submission includes material that does not meet Wikipedia's minimum standard for inline citations. Please cite your sources using footnotes. For instructions on how to do this, please see Referencing for beginners. Thank you. Declined by Shadow311 6 months ago. |
- Comment: Generally Wikipedia does not create articles on murder victims as biographies. The likely eventual title shoud be "Murder of Robert Piest"While Piest was mourned by, and was notable to, those who knew him, he is not notable in a Wikipedia sense. The murder, by contrast, is likely to be a notable article 🇺🇦 FiddleTimtrent FaddleTalk to me 🇺🇦 22:37, 15 May 2024 (UTC)
- Comment: please read WP:REFB for help with formatting sources, other users are unlikely to do this as they don't know which sources contain the content. Theroadislong (talk) 17:07, 15 May 2024 (UTC)
Robet Jerome Piest | |
---|---|
Born | Robert Jerome Piest 16 Mar 1963 Des Plaines, Illinois, U.S. |
Disappeared | December 11, 1978 Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Died | December 11, 1978 Chicago, Illinois, U.S. | (aged 15)
Cause of death | Murder by strangulation or Suffocation |
Body discovered | April 9, 1979 Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Other names | Body 30 |
Known for | Last known victim of John Wayne Gacy; his murder led to the investigation of John Wayne Gacy |
Robert Piest (16 Mar 1963 - 11 Dec 1978) was the final victim of serial killer John Wayne Gacy. He was lured into Gacy's home with a job offering at PDM Contractors, and then strangled to death. His abduction from Nisson Pharmacy set off a Des Plaines police department investigation that led to the discovery of Gacy's crimes.
Background
[edit]Robert Jerome Piest was born in Des Plaines, Illinois on March 16, 1963 to parents Harold Piest (1932-2006) and Elizabeth Piest (1932-2021), Piest was the youngest of three children Ken (1954-2007) and Kerry (1957-). He attended Maine West High School and was involved in the school's Swimming team and Aerobics club. Piest also was a member of a Des Plaines Boy Scouts Troop and reportedly on the verge of winning an Eagle Scout Merit Badge at the time of his death.[1]
According to his parents, Piest had aspirations of becoming an astronaut.[2] He also enjoyed Outdoor recreation and sought a jeep for his 16th birthday to better access difficult terrain.
Murder
[edit]On December 11th, 1978, Piest was working a daily shift as a clerk with his friend and occasional girlfriend, Kim Byers, at Nisson Pharmacy while Gacy was hired to renovate it. Gacy engaged in a conversation about employing teenage boys at his contracting business with Nisson Pharmacy's owner, Phil Torf, in front of Piest, and mentioned that he gave his workers higher wages then what was offered at the pharmacy. Piest had approached Gacy about a potential job offering which led to both agreeing to converse after the pharmacy's closing.
Piest mother was also celebrating her 46th birthday on that day, and arrived at the pharmacy to pick him up for a party with their family. Before he left with Gacy, Byers returned a coat that she borrowed from Piest, and Piest promised his mother that he would return to her after speaking with "That Contractor."
Piest was driven to Gacy's home after Gacy had claimed he needed to get ahold of documents for the job application. According to Gacy's contradicting accounts given to his lawyers and the detectives who interrogated him, he conversed with Piest at his dining table, and made predatory advances and offered him alcohol. Piest brushed them aside and continued questioning about the job.
When he noticed and inquired about the clown paintings that decorated his walls, Gacy mentioned that he worked as a clown and tricked Piest into putting on handcuffs as part of a “magic trick.” What exactly occurred afterwards is unclear due to Gacy conflicting himself with his retellings, but he garroted Piest with rope after luring or dragging him into his bedroom.
As Piest was convulsing on his floor, Gacy received a phone call from a business partner. He placed Piest’s own boxers down the body’s throat to prevent leaking and allegedly slept with it in his bed.
Investigation into disappearance
[edit]When Piest failed to return to her as he promised, Elizabeth repeatedly searched around the pharmacy for him. She asked a few co-workers, including Byers and Torf, about his whereabouts and they all reaffirmed that they last saw him speaking with Gacy.
She then returned home and organized a search with her husband Harold and remaining children, Kerry and Ken. Kerry took her car and one of the family's German Shepards, Ken took his van and the other German Shepard, and Harold took his own car. The three of them spent the entire night patrolling Des Plaines and Chicago, while Elizabeth stayed home and kept a vigil on the phone.
The next day, the family went and reported Piest missing to the Des Plaines Police Department, and heavily emphasized Gacy’s potential involvement. A taskforce was organized by Lieutenant Joseph Kozenczak, a father to one of Piest’s classmates, after they discovered Gacy’s past sodomy conviction against a 15 year old boy in Iowa and a pending charge for an Outstanding Battery complaint filed by a surviving victim, Jeffrey Rignall, in a background check.
Kozenczak then visited and questioned Gacy at his home, who adamantly denied having any contact with Piest, and stated that he had to arrange for an uncle’s funeral. Despite Gacy’s belligerent attitude towards the officers, he agreed to further questioning at the station. By his later admission, he was storing Piest’s corpse in his attic when Kozenczak arrived at his doorsteps.
On his way to the station, Gacy drove Piest’s body to the Des Plaines River and threw it off a bridge. He got his car struck while driving away from the scene and arrived at the station covered in mud. During questioning, Gacy repeated his denials to the interrogating officers.
While the investigators were probing Gacy, the Piest family conducted their own private investigation. According to Kozenczak, Ken and Kerry trailed his officers without them knowing to make sure that they were looking for their brother, and spied on the task force as they were questioning Gacy at his home.[3] Harold and Kerry also tracked down Gacy’s address together through a Ukrainian Orthodox priest (who was an associate to the Piest family’s pastor). Gacy previously did some contracting on the Ukrainian priest’s church, and he gave Harold and Kerry the information they wanted. They drove up to Gacy’s residence, parked their car close to it, and then left after deciding that it would be best to leave it to the investigators.[2] Harold also made several threats to storm Gacy's home for his son if a search warrant wasn't sought.
On December 13, the Des Plaines police department arranged for a search warrant with the concerns that Piest was being held captive in Gacy’s home. Although the officers initially couldn’t find any evidence for Piest’s presence, they discovered several suspicious items, such as handcuffs, pornographic novels pertaining to pedastry, police badges, sex toys, and clothing and high school rings belonging to other missing young men and teenage boys.
Further examinations of Gacy’s history linked him to the disappearances of several PDM employees, such as John Butkovich in 1974 and Gregory Godzik in 1976. With the amount of damning, but not yet incriminating, evidence against him, the Des Plaines police placed Gacy under a 24 hour surveillance. On December 21, Gacy was arrested for passing marijuana to a gas station attendant by the surveillance team, and he admitted to the murders in a drunken confession to his attorneys.
A photo receipt found in Gacy’s trash can was identified by Byers as the same receipt that she placed in Piest’s coat pockets as he disappeared. With the officers noting the smell of decomposition of bodies coming from the crawlspace in their visits to his home, a second search warrant of the home was organized.
In the second search, bodies of dozens of victims were uncovered from the crawlspace and other areas around the property, but Piest wasn’t among them.
Trial and Aftermath
[edit]Piest’s remains were found on April 9, 1979 floating in the Des Plaines River, and identified by dental records and x-ray examinations. He was one of 5 victims tossed into the river after Gacy’s crawl space became too full for further burials, and the last victim to be discovered. A service was held on April 18 at the Our Lady of Hope Church.[4]
Gacy’s proceedings for the murders of Piest and the 32 other victims began on February 30, 1980. On March 30 of that same year, he received several death and life sentences for the killings, and was additionally convicted of taking indecent liberties with a child in reference to sexually abusing Piest.
In 1979, Piest's family founded the Robert Piest Foundation with the Maryvile Academy to help protect troubled youth from predators such as Gacy, and find them stable homes.[4][5] Harold also filed wrongful suits against various directly or indirectly involved parties with his son's death. One of his suits was targeted towards Gacy, his attorneys, and an associated Houston publishing company, with the intentions of preventing them from profiting off the case.[6]
Gacy was executed by lethal injection for the murders on May 10, 1994, some 14 years after his conviction.
Cited works
[edit]- Sullivan, Terry; Maiken, Peter T. (2000). Killer Clown: The John Wayne Gacy Murders (Paperback ed.). Pinnacle. ISBN 0-7860-1422-9. OCLC 156783287.
- The Chicago Killer, by Joseph R. Kozenczak and Karen M. Kozenczak (ISBN 978-1401095314).
- [1]
- Feb 09, 1980, page 5 - Chicago Tribune at Newspapers.com [Chicago Tribune Sat, Feb 09, 1980]
- Apr 16, 1981, page 11 - Chicago Tribune at Newspapers.com [Chicago Tribune Thu, Apr 16, 1981]
- Jun 08, 1980, page 9 - The Park City Daily News at Newspapers.com [The Park City Daily News Sun, Jun 08, 1980]
References
[edit]- ^ Firtsch, Jane (February 9, 1980). "Identify More Victims at Gacy trial". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved May 15, 2024.
- ^ a b Sullivan, Terry (November 2000). Killer Clown: The John Wayne Gacy Murders. Pinnacle. ISBN 0-7860-1422-9.
- ^ Kozenczak, Joseph (November 3, 2003). The Chicago Killer, The Hunt For Serial Killer John Wayne Gacy. Xlibris Corporation. p. 45. ISBN 0-7860-1422-9.
- ^ a b N/A, N/A (April 15, 1979). "Piests plan grant in memory of son". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved May 15, 2024.
- ^ Not given. "Gacy victim's kin set up Scholarship". No. Apr 16, 1981. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved May 15, 2024.
- ^ N/A, N/A (June 8, 1980). "Possible Gacy profits disgust family". The Park City Daily News Sun. Retrieved May 15, 2024.