John Norman Collins
The Michigan Murderer

First to die was Mary Fleszar, in July of 1967. Vanished from
the campus of Eastern Michigan University at Ypsilanti, she was found by
teenaged boys on August 7, stabbed to death and decomposing, with her hands and
feet hacked off. Two days after her remains had been identified, a young man
turned up at the mortuary, asking for permission to take snapshots of the body
(which was angrily refused). Employees at the mortuary could not offer any clear
description of the man.
A year elapsed before the second victim was abducted, on July 1, 1968.
Discovered five days later in Ann Arbor, student Joan Schell had been raped and
stabbed no less than 47 times. Detectives learned that she was seen with fellow
student John Norman Collins on the night she disappeared, but Collins was a
personable youth, and the police accepted his alibi at face value. Another eight
months slipped away before the body of a third co-ed, Jane Mixer, was discovered
in a cemetery south of Ypsilanti. Mixer had been strangled with a nylon
stocking, and a bullet had been fired into her brain at point-blank range before
her corpse was found on March 21, 1969. It was the end of quiet times and the
beginning of a ruthless siege in Ypsilanti, as the co-ed killer stepped up his
attacks in both ferocity and frequency.
On March 25, construction workers near the scene of Joan Schell's murder
stumbled on another corpse. The victim, sixteen-year-old Maralynn Skelton, had
been killed by crushing blows about the head; a stick had been rammed into her
vagina, and police reported evidence of flogging with a heavy strap or belt
before she died. Three weeks later, young Dawn Basom, just thirteen, was found
half-naked in Superior Township, strangled with a black electric cord. Her
sweater was discovered in an old, abandoned farmhouse roughly one mile from the
point where Mari Fleszar's body had been found in 1967.
Driven by some unknown urge, the killer now began to taunt police. Officers
returned to search the empty farmhouse for a second time in early April, and
discovered articles of female clothing which had not been there before. A short
time later, someone torched an old barn on the property where lengths of black
electric cord had been retrieved; lined up across the driveway, officers
discovered five clipped lilac blossoms -- one for each of the outstanding
murders on their books.
On June 9, 1969, some teenaged boys found Alice Kalom, graduate of EMU,
discarded like some broken plaything in a vacant field near Ypsilanti. She had
been raped and stabbed repeatedly, her throat slashed, with a bullet fired into
her brain before the killer's rage was finally spent.
The final victim, Karen Beineman, went missing from her dorm at EMU on July 23.
Her body was discovered three days later, in a wooded gully, strangled, beaten
savagely, her breasts and stomach scalded with some caustic liquid. Karen's
panties had been wadded up and stuffed in her vagina, as a sort of grisly
afterthought; detectives found the garment to be thick with short, clipped hairs
from someone other than the victim.
Three days after the discovery of Karen Beineman's body, State Police Corporal
David Leik returned to his home in Ypsilanti from a family vacation. He
discovered black paint splashed across the basement floor, surmising that it had
been spilled by his wife's nephew, John Collins, who had cared for the family
dog in their absence. Checking in for duty after his vacation, Leik was told
that Collins had been questioned as a suspect in the co-ed murders, whereupon he
spent an evening scraping up the paint, uncovering peculiar brownish stains
beneath it. Lab analysis reported that the stains were only varnish, but in
scraping up the paint, Leik had been forced to relocate a washer in the
basement. Underneath it, he discovered tufts of hair belonging to his sons, the
relics of a family haircut session prior to their vacation. Curious, he turned
the samples over to detectives, and a new report confirmed the clippings were
identical to hair recovered from the panties left with Karen Beineman. In his
apparent haste to cover what he thought were bloodstains, Collins led detectives
to the evidence for which they had been waiting all along.
Pretrial investigation showed that Collins was a chronic thief who sometimes
suffered violent rages, usually directed toward some female who had managed to
offend him. Intimate acquaintances described the suspect as an over-sexed and
sometimes brutal lover who was "into" bondage and repulsed by any contact with a
woman in her menstrual cycle. (Several of the victims had been murdered in their
menstrual periods.) In June of 1969, he used a worthless check to rent a trailer
which was later found in California, near the scene of yet another unsolved rape
and homicide. At trial, he was convicted of the Beineman murder and consigned to
prison for a term of twenty years.
SERIAL KILLERS LIVE HERE
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