Crime & Safety
ID of Serial Killer's Walnut Creek Victim Confirmed 34 Years Later
Napa County Sheriff's deputy finds remains of Lou Ellen Burleigh, who disappeared in 1977 at age 21.

Bay City News Service
The remains of a Walnut Creek woman murdered by a 1970s serial killer have been identified by a Napa County sheriff's deputy.
Deputy Michael Bartlett, who was interested in the case of Lou Ellen Burleigh, found a bone fragment earlier this year that was later confirmed to be part of the remains of Burleigh, who in 1977 left her Walnut Creek home for a job interview but never returned.
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The 21-year-old's vehicle was later found in Pleasant Hill. Although a suspect, Roger Kibbe, was identified, the case went cold, police said.
More details about Lou Ellen Burleigh are gathered in this blog.
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In 2002, a San Joaquin County district attorney's investigator resubmitted DNA evidence from five murders from the 1980s in which the victims were strangled. The DNA examination pointed to Kibbe, who was in custody for a murder in El Dorado County.
Kibbe allegedly confessed to several strangler cases that took place on Interstate Highway 5, and police said that he confessed to kidnapping Burleigh, tying her up and driving her to Lake Berryessa, where he allegedly raped and killed her.
According to police, Kibbe said that he left her body in a dry riverbed near the lake. The following year, investigators from the Napa and San Joaquin county district attorney's offices and a Walnut Creek police detective brought Kibbe to several possible locations near Lake Berryessa in hopes of finding Burleigh's remains, but to no avail.
In 2007, a thorough search of an area similar to one that Kibbe described also failed to yield results.
In 2009, Kibbe was convicted for six murders, including Burleigh's, and he was sentenced to multiple life sentences without the possibility of parole.
Police said that earlier this year Bartlett became interested in the case and asked to be taken to the location where Kibbe likely left Burleigh. Bartlett uncovered a small piece of bone sticking out of some gravel on the creek bed's bottom.
Once an anthropologist confirmed the bone was a female bone, it was sent to a DNA lab where an examination confirmed it belonged to Burleigh. Police said that Burleigh's mother and two brothers were notified of the identified remains on Friday.