Richard Marc Edward Evonitz (July 29, 1963June 27, 2002) was an American serial killer, kidnapping, and rapist responsible for the deaths of at least three teenage girls in Spotsylvania County, Virginia, and the abduction of Kara Robinson in Lexington County, South Carolina. Evonitz has been suspected of other murders, and confessed to other crimes to his sister shortly before committing suicide.
Early life and career
Richard Evonitz was born on July 29, 1963, at Providence Hospital in Columbia, South Carolina, to Joseph and Tess Evonitz. The eldest of three siblings, Evonitz had two sisters: Kristen, born in July 1968, and Jennifer, born in March 1971. The family was dysfunctional. His parents separated when he was a baby, and again when he was 12. They officially divorced in 1985. Richard's father was an alcoholic who frequently passed out after drinking. He also frequently belittled his family, calling them "morons" and "
peons". His father drowned Richard's dog in front of him. When Richard was only 6, Joseph attempted to drown him. Later, Richard's wives would claim that he experienced nightmares about his father.
[ Richard Marc Evonitz, Radford University.]
After graduating from Irmo High School in 1980, Evonitz worked briefly as the manager of a Jiffy Lube, before joining the United States Navy. He then served as a sonar technician and received a Good Conduct Medal before being honorably discharged after eight years of service. Following his stint in the Navy, Evonitz worked steadily at businesses that sold compressors and grinding equipment. Unable to keep up with bills following a divorce, he filed for bankruptcy in 1997. He had a house foreclosed in 1999 after a failed business venture. At the time of his death, Evonitz had been working at an air-compressor company since moving to South Carolina a few years earlier.
Criminal history
Assaults
On January 3, 1987, Evonitz pulled up beside
Kelli Ballard, 15, in his car in Jacksonville, Florida and exposed himself and
masturbation while she walked her 3-year-old sister down the street. The following day, Evonitz was seen following Kelli and her mother in a mall parking lot. Kelli and her mother took down his license plate information and alerted the police. He was arrested a month later when his ship returned to port. He entered a plea of
Nolo contendere and was sentenced to three years'
probation.
Evonitz told the police that he "had a problem masturbating in front of girls." Evonitz was also suspected of a 1994 abduction and a 1995 rape in Spotsylvania, Virginia.
Murder of Sarah Cherry
On July 6, 1988, 12-year-old
Sarah Margaret Cherry was abducted while babysitting at a home in a rural part of Bowdoin, Maine. Several days later, Cherry's body was found hidden in a wooded area. She had been bound with rope,
Sexual assault with
birch sticks, stabbed, and then strangled with a scarf.
On March 18, 1989,
Dennis Dechaine was convicted for the murder. However, Dechaine has filed a number of appeals, maintaining that he is innocent, and the circumstances surrounding his conviction remain controversial.
Evonitz served as a sonar technician aboard which was based in Portland, Maine, from May 8, 1988, to May 31, 1989, while the ship was undergoing a refit at the Bath Iron Works facility. Deirdre Enright, the founder of the University of Virginia Law School's Innocence Project, has linked Evonitz to Cherry's murder due to similarities with his modus operandi. Evonitz had access to a white Toyota Corolla similar in description to a vehicle sighted near where Cherry's body was found and he was known to have frequently visited Brunswick Naval Air Station commissary, south of Bowdoin. DNA evidence recovered from Cherry's body was unable to be compared to Evonitz's profile due to being deemed insufficient. Dechaine remains incarcerated at Maine State Prison in Warren, Maine.
Route 29 stalker
At 7:30 a.m. on March 2, 1996, 25-year-old
Alicia Showalter Reynolds left her Baltimore, Maryland, residence to drive to Charlottesville, Virginia.
At 6 p.m., Alicia's car was found abandoned along a highway near Culpeper, Virginia. Witnesses later came forward to police saying they had seen Alicia along Route 29 talking to a man with a blue
pickup truck on the side of the road. Her body was discovered in a wooded area to the southeast of where she had gone missing on May 7, 1996. Although the cause of death has not been released, investigators believe that she had been murdered.
It has never been confirmed that Evonitz murdered her.
On September 22, 1996, the burned remains of 20-year-old Anne Carolyn McDaniel were discovered by sportsmen exercising their dogs just from where Reynolds' body was found. McDaniel, who was diagnosed with cerebral palsy, was last seen leaving a group home for mentally and physically disabled adults in the town of Orange on September 18, 1996, trying to hitchhike along Route 29. Authorities believe Evonitz may have killed McDaniel after discovering scribbled directions to Reynolds' dumpsite in one of his footlockers.
Silva and Lisk murders
On September 9, 1996, Evonitz abducted 16-year-old
Sofia Marlene Silva from her home in Spotsylvania County, Virginia, after she returned from school near Loriella Park. She was last seen doing her homework on her front steps and was taken without an apparent struggle or any witnesses. Her decomposed body was found a month later in Birchwood Creek, off State Route 3 in King George County.
She was wrapped in a white cover and her pubic hair had been shaved off.
On May 1, 1997, Evonitz abducted sisters Kristin Michelle Lisk, 15, and Kathryn Nicole Lisk, 12, from their front lawn on Block House Road in Spotsylvania County, Virginia. Both were last seen getting off their respective school buses. Their father came home from work later to find no sign of his daughters except Kristin's book bag lying discarded in the front yard. After sexually assaulting them, Evonitz strangled the sisters and dumped their bodies in the South Anna River. Their bodies were found five days later.
Abduction of Kara Robinson
On June 24, 2002, Evonitz abducted 15-year-old
Kara Robinson from a friend's yard in Lexington, South Carolina. He got out of his car and approached her, pretending to offer her some "pamphlets." After she said her friend's parents were not home, Evonitz held a gun to her neck
and then forced her into a plastic bin with a gag in her mouth. He took her to his apartment, raped her, forced her to take Valium, and tied her to his bed. After watching the evening news about her abduction, he tied her to a homemade wooden apparatus to spread her legs. While Evonitz was asleep, Robinson was able to free herself, escape, and identify her abductor to the police using information she found on Evonitz's refrigerator. She went outside and found two men in a car who took her to the sheriff's office.
The police determined that the fibers from the furry handcuffs on Kara's wrists were also found on the bodies of Silva and the Lisk sisters. Kristin Lisk's handprint was also lifted from the inside of Evonitz' car trunk. In addition, in his apartment police found nude photos of young girls, hundreds of pornographic images and videotapes of children on his computer, including one of him molesting a young girl and another of him masturbating to of other children. There were also a large number of girls' underwear to which he had done numerous disturbing activities which have never been linked to any specific individual.
Capture and suicide
On June 27, 2002, Evonitz called his sister, Jennifer, admitting to having committed "more crimes than he can remember," and told her to meet him at an
IHOP in Jacksonville, Florida, but she instead called the police and informed them of what he told her.
Later that day, Evonitz was surrounded by police on Bayfront Drive in Sarasota, Florida. He was urged to surrender peacefully, but after a police dog was released,
Evonitz committed suicide by shooting himself in the head with his .25 caliber
handgun.
Media
Evonitz's case is featured in an episode of the show
Deadly Sins titled "Insatiable". On February 11, 2023, Lifetime released a television film called
The Girl Who Escaped: The Kara Robinson Story. The film starred Katie Douglas as Kara Robinson,
Cara Buono as Debra Robinson, and
Kristian Bruun as Richard Evonitz.
Elizabeth Smart served as an executive producer.
YouTube personalities
Anthony Padilla and
KallMeKris also interviewed Kara.
See also
-
List of serial killers in the United States
Further reading