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They were a young couple starting out, with an infant son and everything ahead of them. ET3 Kichler and his wife Dina had recently moved from a trailer park to their own home in Jacksonville, Florida, and had a close circle of family and friends.
Twenty-one-year-old Dina Fay Kichler was pretty, petite (barely 5 feet and weighing 88 pounds), vivacious and popular. She played cards and softball with friends and worked out at the base gym at NAS Mayport. She had a job at Ace Optics, and while she was at work, friends looked after the Kichlers's son, Rick. More
The music blares and images of the crime scene and snapshots of the victim with family and friends before the murder parade across the screen. The narrator recites the timeline and the bare facts of the crime, cutting away to interviews with homicide investigators who give dramatic details of the gruesome story. Telling how, by matching the DNA from the saliva on the envelope seal with evidence from the bite marks on the victim's neck, they brought down the killer – who had thought he'd gotten away with the perfect crime.
This is television. This is one of the success stories. |
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In 1982, 23-year-old RMSN Pamela Ann Kimbrue, a native of Bay City, Michigan, had been in the Navy for two years and was stationed at NAS Norfolk. Every working day at 0400 for the previous eight months, RMSN Kimbrue opened Building LP-1 at the air station.
RMSN Kimbrue was blonde and very pretty, with an open smile. Known for her conscientiousness, people said they could set their watches by her. If she was a little shy, she was also warm and likable, close with friends and family. She was a good Sailor. She had just received a 4.0 on her recent Eval.
On 25 March 1982, RMSN Kimbrue drove to work as usual in her 1976 beige Camaro with Michigan plates. She rarely changed her route or routine. She usually stopped for coffee, but not today. She had other things on her mind—a new overseas billet—which may have made coffee seem unnecessary. RMSN Kimbrue had orders to Greece, and the next day would be her last day working in Norfolk. More

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