Richard Norbert Clarey Jr. (born July 18, 1960) is a Germany-United States Neo-Nazism, convicted murderer and self-confessed serial killer. He was convicted for the murders of three men in Michigan in 1984, but later confessed to being responsible for over 100 unsubstantiated murders, starting at the age of 15 in his native West Germany.
On January 3, 1984, Clarey was paroled from the Kalamazoo Correctional Center, where he had served on charges of breaking and entering. On April 15, he accepted a ride from acquaintance, 36-year-old Robert Baranski. When they were alone, Clarey shot Robert and later dumped his body at a pier in South Haven.
He then picked up another man known to him, 17-year-old John Asher, planning to drive down to California. Along the way, however, Richard lost control of the car and crashed into a ditch near a I-94 freeway rest stop outside New Buffalo. Needing another vehicle, the pair shot 59-year-old Floyd Holmes, a traveling salesman from Santa Monica, California, who was visiting family members in Detroit. They tried to start up his truck but failed. They then set their sights on another truck, belonging to 28-year-old Dean R. Bultema, a Wimbledon, North Dakota, resident who was towing an antique car that he planned to sell in Owosso. Richard shot Bultema as well. The pair managed to start up the truck, but got stuck in mud at the rest stop. Clarey fled on foot, while Asher was arrested at the scene.
More than 30 officers from both Michigan and Indiana were dispatched to search for the fugitive, utilizing police helicopters and bloodhounds. He was arrested by authorities in the attic of a garage in La Porte, Indiana, without incident a few hours later.
Before his trial, Clarey was ordered to undertake a competency hearing at the Center for Forensic Psychiatry in Ypsilanti, where he was examined by researchers Elissa P. Bendek and Russell C. Petrella over the course of several days. In the end, it was revealed that while Clarey harbored great resentment towards Americans because of his rough childhood and a girlfriend being impregnated by an American, he was aware of the nature of his actions and was reasonably intelligent. According to Bendek, he was aware that he could plead insanity but refrained from doing so as he believed that he wasn't of an unsound mind.
After Clarey was ruled competent to stand trial, his trial was scheduled for December 1984. During the trial, more than 50 people testified: among them was psychologist Leonard Donk, who said that the defendant suffered from an array of disorders, most prominently periodic schizophrenia; another was Raymond Matthews, who revealed that on the night before Holmes' and Bultema's killings, Clary had approached his truck, tried to break in, and shot a gun at him.
A videotaped confession further proved Clarey's guilt. When he took the stand, he claimed to have realized that he needed help. On December 21, 1984, he was found guilty of the Holmes-Butelma murders, and received mandatory life imprisonment sentences.
Two months later, Clarey was put on a second trial for the murder of Baranski. Clarey plead guilty to the murder, but did so in a diminished capacity plea, receiving another term of life imprisonment. Two years after his conviction, he appealed two of his murder convictions, but the appeal was rejected by the appeallate court. To this day, Richard Clarey remains incarcerated at the Ionia Correctional Facility.
Trial and imprisonment
Confessions
See also
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