1970: 3300 Yorktown In either November or early December 1970, Brooks was informed by Corll that the two teenagers he had seen strapped to his bed had actually been murdered. He was offered $200 (the equivalent of approximately $1,670 ) for any boy he could lure to Corll's apartment, with Corll also emphasizing he should particularly target individuals who likely would not be missed by their families. Brooks accepted this enticement in approximately December 1970. Glass and Yates were last seen by Glass's older brother, Willie, "midway through the service" walking down an aisle toward the exit of the church. It is unknown what ruse Brooks used—with or without the assistance of Corll—to lure the two to Corll's apartment; however, Glass had been an acquaintance of both Corll and Brooks and had taken a great liking to Corll. Both teens were restrained to Corll's four-poster bed with rope and handcuffs and subsequently raped, strangled, and buried in a
Southwest Houston boat shed Corll had begun renting on November 17. An electrical cord with
alligator clips attached to each end was buried alongside Yates's body.
1971: Place One Apartments On the afternoon of January 30, 1971, Brooks and Corll encountered two teenage brothers, Donald and Jerry Waldrop, walking toward their parents' home. The Waldrop brothers had been driven to a friend's home on West 12th Street by their father, Everett, with plans to discuss forming a bowling league, and had begun walking home after learning their friend was not at home. The brothers were enticed into Corll's van and driven to an apartment Corll had recently rented on Mangum Road, where they were raped, then strangled to death in Brooks's presence on the day after their abduction before Brooks assisted Corll in their burial in the boat shed. where he worked part-time as a gas station attendant. Harvey was driven to Corll's Mangum Road apartment, where he was subsequently killed by a single gunshot through the eye. He had known Brooks for some time prior to his murder, and Brooks is known to have once reported Harvey to the police, accusing the teenager of stealing his stereo.
Subsequent abductions Between May and August 1971, Corll committed the abduction and murder of at least four further victims—three of whom lived in Houston Heights. He was assisted by Brooks in the abduction and burial of at least three of these victims. Two of these victims, 13-year-old David William Hilligiest and 16-year-old Gregory Malley Winkle, were abducted and killed together on the afternoon of May 29; both were murdered at an apartment Corll by this time rented on West 11th Street. A 17-year-old named Donald John Falcon disappeared from the streets near his parents'
West University Place apartment complex on July 1. He is believed to have been murdered at an apartment Corll had rented on East 7th Street on June 1 and on August 17, Corll and Brooks persuaded a 17-year-old acquaintance of theirs named Ruben Willfard Watson Haney—whom they encountered as Haney walked home from a Houston movie theater—to attend a party at an apartment Corll had moved to on San Felipe Street the previous month. Haney agreed and later phoned his mother to inform her he was spending the evening with Brooks. He was subsequently gagged, raped, then strangled to death. All four victims were buried in the boat shed. One further victim is known to have been murdered in 1971, although this victim remains unidentified. This individual was abducted in approximately October 1971 and murdered at an apartment Corll had moved to on Columbia Street. According to Brooks's confession, this victim was murdered "just before
Wayne Henley came into the picture. Dean kept this boy around the house for about four days before he killed him ... I don't remember his name, but we picked him up on 11th and Rutland. It really upset Dean to have to kill this boy because he really liked him."
Encounter with Elmer Wayne Henley Throughout much of 1971, Brooks remained enrolled at high school, although his attendance was increasingly sporadic. In approximately October 1971, he encountered
Elmer Wayne Henley—then aged fifteen—as the two simultaneously opted to truant from school. Henley would later recall Brooks fell into stride alongside him and asked if he was "skipping school too" as he walked away from the school entrance in the direction of a nearby pool hall and that when he replied in the affirmative, Brooks offered to keep him company for the day, adding he also attended Hamilton Junior High School and that the pool hall was also his intended destination. The two began to truant together regularly, and Brooks soon learned that although Henley was a
sociable youth, he came from a broken home, had little money, and worked two simultaneous, menial part-time jobs to assist his mother with household finances. Henley himself soon became curious as to why Brooks always seemed to have ample cash despite not working and himself hailing from a family of modest means. Weeks later, Brooks informed Henley that if he discreetly left his Heights home "without telling anyone where [he was] going", he and Corll would pick him up behind the Fulbright Methodist Church at 5 p.m. sharp and discuss "a deal where [he] could make some money." Henley agreed, and Brooks and Corll picked him up at the agreed time and drove him to Corll's address—likely as an intended victim. This evident ploy to make Henley Corll's next victim was thwarted when Henley became unnerved at observing Corll brandishing a
hunting knife as he discussed the need to silence anyone who caught him in the act of future burglaries he had proposed Henley commit with him before Brooks asked: "You didn't tell anyone where you were, right?" This question led Henley to reply that he had informed his mother and grandmother he was leaving the family home in Brooks's company to meet Corll for the first time. Minutes later, Brooks drove Henley home.
Second accomplice Despite this initial setback, Corll evidently decided Henley—a much more sociable youth than Brooks—would make a good accomplice, and Henley soon began spending increasing amounts of time in Corll's company. Over the course of several subsequent conversations, Corll repeatedly referred to the topic of
human trafficking before informing Henley "such a market does exist" and claiming that he was involved in a "
white slavery ring" operating from
Dallas, in which teenage boys were sold as
houseboys to wealthy middle-aged clients across the country and that he would pay him $200 for any teenage boy he could lure to his apartment. Corll referred to this organization as "
the Syndicate".
1972: Schuler Street In either February or early March 1972, Henley decided he would "help find a boy" for Corll to sell to the Syndicate as his family was in dire financial circumstances. According to Henley's subsequent confession, he resolved to participate in a sole abduction as he could use the money "to get better things for my [family], so one day I went over to Dean's place on Schuler Street and told him I would get a boy for him." The pair then drove around the Heights to search for a victim. At the corner of 11th and Studewood, Henley persuaded an unknown youth with dark hair to enter Corll's
Plymouth GTX on the promise of smoking some marijuana at Corll's apartment. At Corll's home, Henley enacted a previous ruse he and Corll had privately devised in which Henley would cuff own his hands behind his back, then release himself with a key discreetly hidden in his jeans pocket, then con the victim into placing the handcuffs upon himself. After duping the teenager into donning the handcuffs, Henley watched Corll pounce on the youth, bind his hands and feet with
parachute cord, then place adhesive tape over his mouth. Brooks then drove Henley home, explaining to him the Syndicate did not yet know of his participation and thus he should not be present when they arrived to collect the captive. The next day, Corll paid Henley the agreed sum of $200, informing him the teenager had been sold into the sex slavery ring. Approximately month later, on the evening of March 24, Henley, Corll and Brooks encountered an 18-year-old acquaintance of Henley's named Frank Anthony Aguirre leaving a seafood restaurant on Yale Street. Henley invited Aguirre to accompany him Corll's home on the promise of drinking beer and smoking marijuana; Aguirre agreed and followed the trio to Corll's home in his
Rambler. Inside Corll's house, Aguirre smoked marijuana with the trio before picking up a pair of handcuffs Corll had deliberately left on his table. In response, Corll pounced on Aguirre, pushed him onto the table, cuffed his hands behind his back, then dragged him into his bedroom. . At least five victims murdered in 1972 were buried at this location. Henley—at this stage still oblivious to the true fate of the first victim he had lured to Corll's home—attempted to dissuade Corll from raping and killing Aguirre. The following evening, Henley assisted Corll and Brooks in burying Aguirre's body at
High Island Beach. Despite learning the reality of the fate of the boys he or Brooks brought to Corll, Henley continued to assist in the abductions and murders. Brooks would later claim that "most of the killings that occurred after [Henley] came into the picture involved all three of us. I still did not take part in the actual killing, but nearly always all three of us were there." According to Brooks, although "it didn't bother [him] to see" the victims restrained, tortured, raped and murdered, both prior to and following Henley's participation in the abductions and murders, his own role had primarily been to participate in the abduction and burial of the victims and "help if something went wrong", but that Henley had increasingly participated in the abuse and torture of the victims—being "especially sadistic" at Schuler Street. Less than one month later, Henley lured 17-year-old Mark Steven Scott to Corll's apartment. Scott—well known to Brooks, Henley and Corll—was specifically chosen by Corll to be his next victim as he had "recently cheated [Corll] on a deal" pertaining to stolen goods. As such, by April 1972, Corll held extreme animosity toward him and on April 20, Corll instructed Henley to lure Scott to his apartment, where he and Brooks were waiting. Henley encountered Scott walking down an alleyway in the Heights and persuaded him to accompany him to Corll's apartment. According to Henley, shortly prior to Scott's abduction, either he or Corll had accidentally burned himself on an
incense cone, and this incident had inspired Corll to torture Scott via this method. Scott was grabbed by force and fought furiously against attempts by Corll and Brooks to restrain him, even attempting to stab Corll with a knife the following morning after several hours of abuse and torture; however, according to Brooks, Scott "just gave up" after seeing Henley point a
.22 caliber pistol toward him. Brooks would later confess to authorities that "Wayne killed Mark Scott and I think that he strangled him." Brooks would later inform authorities that Corll typically observed rules in how to overpower and restrain his victims—one of which, by 1972, was that there should invariably be at least one more individual to overpower and restrain the victim(s) than the total number of victims. Less than two weeks after Henley's sixteenth birthday, on May 21, either Corll or Brooks summoned him to Corll's apartment, where he observed two Heights teenagers, Billy Gene Baulch Jr. (17) and Johnny Ray Delome (16), socializing with Corll and Brooks. He assisted Corll and Brooks in overpowering and subduing the teenagers, both of whom were bound, then tied to Corll's bed. Both were forced to write letters to their parents claiming they had found employment "for a trucker loading and unloading from Houston to
Washington" before Corll proceeded to rape them prior to their torture. In Brooks's confession, he stated that both youths were tied to Corll's bed and, after their torture and rape, Henley strangled Baulch to death with a length of cord, with the process lasting almost thirty minutes as Brooks tried to divert Delome's attention by talking to him. Henley then shouted, "Hey, Johnny!" and shot Delome once in the forehead with Corll's .22 caliber pistol, with the bullet exiting through the youth's ear. Several minutes later, Delome pleaded with Henley, "Wayne, please don't!" before he was strangled to death by both Corll and Henley. Both youths were later buried at High Island Beach.
Westcott Towers Between June 26 and November 16, 1972, Corll resided in two separate apartments at Westcott Towers. At least five further victims were murdered between these dates. The first victim, 17-year-old Steven Kent Sickman, was last seen leaving a party held near the Heights on July 19. He was murdered by strangulation with a nylon cord and buried close to the entrance of the boat shed; his murder was followed approximately one month later by that of 19-year-old Roy Eugene Bunton, who was last seen by his family walking to his job as an assistant manager at a shoe store within the
Northwest Mall. Bunton was bound, gagged with a section of Turkish towel and adhesive tape, then killed by two gunshots to the head before also being buried close to the entrance of the boat shed. It is unknown whether Brooks or Henley assisted with either abduction or murder. On the afternoon of October 3, Henley and Brooks abducted two Heights boys named Wally Jay Simoneaux (14) and Richard Edward Hembree (13) as they walked home from Hamilton Junior High School. The two—described by Brooks as "both young boys from the Heights area"—were enticed into Brooks's Corvette and driven to Corll's address. That evening, Simoneaux is known to have phoned his mother, Mildred, and to have shouted the word "Mama" into the receiver before the connection was terminated. Both were restrained to a plywood torture board measuring with handcuffs and ropes affixed to both sides of each corner and with a further hole drilled into the top center of the board in order that the device could be hung upon a wall which Corll had constructed that summer. The following morning, Hembree was accidentally shot in the mouth by Henley. According to Brooks's confession, "Wayne accidentally shot one of them. This was about 7 a.m. I was in the other room asleep when this happened. Dean told me Wayne had just just came in waving the .22 and accidentally shot one of the boys in the jaw." Both were kept alive for approximately twelve further hours before they were strangled to death. Simoneaux and Hembree were later buried in the boat shed. One month later, on November 11, a 19-year-old carpenter's helper named Richard Alan Kepner was abducted while walking to call his fiancée from a pay phone. His strangled body was later buried at High Island Beach and on an unknown date the same month, an 18-year-old
Oak Forest youth known to Corll and Henley named Willard Karmon Branch Jr. disappeared while hitchhiking from
Mount Pleasant to Houston. He was
emasculated and shot once above the left ear before his body was buried in the boat shed. ==1973==