Center for Missing Children Provided Link
Supervisor Saw Possible Connection Between Slain
By Patricia Davis and Josh
White
Cathy Nahirny was in a hurry
to leave her
Nahirny began searching a
large public records computer database at the center's headquarters in
"I'm flying through the
database as quickly as I can -- quickly because I had to leave," Nahirny,
supervisor of the center's case analysis and support division, said yesterday.
"Then I saw
The connections Nahirny
made between Evonitz and the disappearance and deaths of Sofia Silva, 16, in
September 1996, and Kati Lisk, 12, and her sister, Kristin, 15, in May 1997,
helped lead to the discovery of circumstantial evidence linking Evonitz to the
crimes. Yesterday, authorities were waiting for the results of DNA tests and
other physical evidence sent to FBI headquarters to say for sure whether
Evonitz, who committed suicide last week after a police chase, is the killer.
But Nahirny could see that
Evonitz had lived in the same places, at the same times, as the
"Bold. Broad daylight. Kids standing in a front
yard. And gone," Nahirny said to herself. "Could this be the
guy? I said, 'Wow, we gotta move on it.' "
Still, despite the biggest
break in the case in years, authorities were cautious yesterday.
"Our hopes have been
dashed a thousand times before," Spotsylvania County Sheriff Ronald T.
Knight said. He said the search of Evonitz's home is "one of the hottest
leads in a long, long time. . . . We're not just going to blame it on the dead
guy; that would be easy to do. We're going to prove this beyond a reasonable
doubt."
Reached at his
After receiving the
information from the
FBI officials said they are
moving quickly to analyze Evonitz's DNA to see whether there is a match with
their forensic evidence. FBI behavioral scientists and psychological profilers
are continuing to investigate what could be a series of cases linked to him.
"It goes without
saying that they would be interested in any unsolved murders," said
Lawrence Barry, an FBI spokesman in
Barry said that FBI
officials "are very interested" in Evonitz but that "to make the
leap that this is the guy is premature at this point."
Law enforcement authorities
said police agencies in several states are interested in Evonitz in connection
with unsolved slayings going back more than a decade. Lucy Caldwell, a Virginia
State Police spokeswoman, said yesterday that there is no clear evidence
linking Evonitz to a fourth slaying, that of Alicia Showalter Reynolds, a
Baltimore student whose body was found in 1996, two months after she got into a
pickup truck with a man along Route 29 in Culpeper County. According to
"If there's any new
information that is coming forward and we can use, certainly we will,"
Sources close to the
investigation said yesterday that in 1996, Evonitz's name was placed on a list
of people who had recently moved into
According to records in the
Clay County Sheriff's Office, Evonitz had been prowling a residential
neighborhood, repeatedly driving by in his beige four-door Dodge with
At the time, Evonitz had
been in the Navy for 3 1/2 years and was assigned to the USS Koelsch, which was
stationed in
Yesterday, no one answered
the door at Evonitz's
Family and friends at
Evonitz's mother's house also would not comment.
The Lisk sisters vanished
after getting off separate school buses in front of their home in 1997. Their
bodies were found five days later after an intense search in the
The abduction of the girl
in
"We wouldn't have
known about it if this girl hadn't escaped," Charlotte Foster, a case
manager for the
Foster contacted Nahirny at
the center's headquarters after officials in
After noticing similarities
in the cases, Nahirny turned the information over to Charles Pickett, the
center's senior case manager for the Lisk and Silva cases. He thought she was
onto something and called Maj. Howard Smith in
The center "absolutely
got the ball rolling," said Smith, who helped search Evonitz's apartment
and car Friday and Saturday.
Knight said he does not
know whether Evonitz was a serial killer but said: "These types don't stop
at one. I don't know, but experience tells us he's been fairly active in some
other jurisdictions." He said "his death has robbed us from gleaning
[information] for other cases."
The sheriff was guarded
about his feelings on the break in the case.
"I'm just cautious and
reserved. I'm going to wait for the evidence, and then I'll really get
excited," he said.
Staff writers Maria Glod in
(c) 2002 The Washington
Post Company