Schuler Street One month later, on the evening of March 24, 1972, Henley, in the company of Corll and Brooks, encountered an 18-year-old acquaintance of his named Frank Anthony Aguirre leaving a restaurant on Yale Street, where the youth worked. Aguirre was persuaded to accompany Henley to Corll's home on the promise of drinking beer and smoking marijuana with them. 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, and cuffed his hands behind his back. Henley later claimed that he had not known of Corll's true intentions towards Aguirre when he persuaded his friend to accompany him to Corll's home, and to still at this stage be oblivious to Corll's true intentions toward teenagers he or Brooks brought to him; he later claimed to have been startled upon seeing Corll suddenly "jump" upon Aguirre after the teenager had idly placed one handcuff upon his own wrist and to have attempted to dissuade Corll from raping and killing Aguirre. . Henley and Brooks began assisting Corll in burying his victims at this location in March 1972. The following evening, Henley assisted Corll and Brooks in burying Aguirre's body at
High Island Beach. Corll and Brooks later informed Henley that his childhood friend, David Hilligiest, and Hilligiest's swimming companion, Gregory Malley Winkle, had also died at his hands and that as such, there was no use in continuing to search for them. On April 20, Henley encountered Scott walking down a Heights alleyway close to 23rd Street and persuaded him to accompany him to Corll's apartment. 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. As had been the case with Frank Aguirre, Scott was strangled and buried at High Island Beach, although on this occasion, Henley strangled Scott into
unconsciousness with a length of cord before Corll completed the murder. Brooks later stated Henley was "especially
sadistic" in his participation in the murders committed at Schuler Street and Henley later admitted to gradually becoming "fascinated" with "how much stamina people have" when subjected to the act of murder, with Corll alternately bestowing praise on his accomplices and goading them—but particularly Henley—to prove their
loyalty and worth to him. On May 21, Henley entered Corll's apartment to observe two Heights youths, Billy Gene Baulch Jr. (17) and Johnny Ray Delome (16), socializing with Corll and Brooks. He assisted Corll and Brooks in subduing the teenagers, both of whom were bound, then tied to Corll's bed. Corll then suggested Henley sexually assault one boy while he assaulted the other, but Henley refused. Both were then forced to write letters to their parents—dated May 23 and posted from
Madisonville—claiming they had found employment with a truck driver "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 the process lasting almost thirty minutes; he then shouted, "Hey, Johnny!" and shot Delome 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. In part due to the fact Mark Scott had managed to partially free himself while bound and had almost succeeded in stabbing Corll, in approximately June 1972, Corll constructed a further plywood torture board measuring with handcuffs and ropes affixed to both sides of each corner in order to securely restrain his victim or victims. A further hole was drilled into the top center of the board in order that the device could be hung upon a wall. Thus, many future victims were restrained to this device as opposed to Corll's bed or other devices, and on the occasions where Corll restrained two victims to this device, one would be forced to watch the abuse inflicted upon the other to increase the victims'
psychological torture.
Summer–winter 1972 Corll moved to an apartment at Westcott Towers in June 1972. Within one month, on July 19, a 17-year-old teenager named Steven Kent Sickman had been murdered by strangulation and buried in a boat shed Corll rented in
Southwest Houston. His murder was followed approximately one month later by that of 19-year-old Roy Eugene Bunton, who was bound, gagged with a section of Turkish towel and adhesive tape, then killed by two gunshots to the head before also being buried in the boat shed. Neither victim was named or referenced by either accomplice, and it is unknown whether Henley or Brooks assisted with either abduction or murder. On October 3, Henley and Brooks abducted two Heights boys named Wally Jay Simoneaux and Richard Edward Hembree as they walked home from Hamilton Junior High School. Both were enticed into Brooks's Chevrolet Corvette and driven to Corll's Westcott Towers 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. At approximately 7 a.m. the following day, Hembree was accidentally shot in the mouth by Henley who, according to Brooks's confession, "just came in (the room where the two boys were bound) waving the .22 and accidentally shot one of the boys in the jaw." The bullet exited Hembree's neck, although both were kept alive for approximately twelve further hours before they were strangled to death that evening. Simoneaux and Hembree were later buried in the boat shed. One month later, on November 11, a 19-year-old named Richard Alan Kepner was abducted while walking to call his fiancée from a pay phone. Kepner hailed from
Humble, Texas, but had relocated to
Spring Branch shortly before his disappearance to train as a carpenter's helper. His strangled body was buried at High Island Beach, and Henley is known to have assisted Corll and Brooks in this particular abduction and murder. Sometime in November 1972, an 18-year-old
Oak Forest youth known to both Corll and Henley named Willard Karmon Branch Jr. disappeared while hitchhiking from
Mount Pleasant to Houston. Branch was gagged,
emasculated and shot once above the left ear before his body was buried in the boat shed.
1973 On January 20, 1973, Corll moved to the Princessa Apartments on Wirt Road in the Spring Branch district of Houston. Lyles had known both Corll and Brooks for several months prior to his disappearance; he had lived on Antoine Drive—the same street upon which Brooks resided in early 1973. According to Brooks, Corll had wanted him to assist in restraining Lyles, but he refused; in response, Corll overpowered and bound the teen before Brooks hurriedly left Corll's apartment. Lyles's body was later buried on a sandbank on
Jefferson County Beach. One month later, on March 1, Corll vacated the Princessa Apartments; he briefly resided in an apartment on South Post Oak Road before moving into his father's residence at 2020 Lamar Drive in
Pasadena on March 19. Corll briefly lived with his father, stepmother and half-brother at this address before they vacated the property.
Distancing efforts Lyles's abduction and murder was committed without the assistance or knowledge of Henley, who had spontaneously chosen to travel from Texas to
Florida with his uncle, a long-haul truck driver, in January 1973 before then traveling from Florida to visit another uncle in
Atlanta, Georgia. Henley did try to divulge Corll's crimes and his involvement in them to this uncle, but he simply believed Henley was either morbidly
fantasizing or had a
psychiatric disorder, and ordered Henley to return to his mother. Weeks after returning to Houston, Henley traveled to Mount Pleasant in a further effort to distance himself from Corll. Two weeks later, he received a phone call from David Brooks likely made at Corll's behest in which Brooks stated he could not guarantee the safety of one of his younger brothers or the younger brother of David Hilligiest if he did not return home. Henley returned to live with his mother in April 1973. he had dropped out of high school and possessed a limited formal education. In a 2010 interview, Henley stated: "I couldn't leave anyway. If I did go, I knew Dean would go after one of my little brothers, who he always liked a little too much." On Monday, June 4, 1973, Corll ordered Henley to "bring [him] a boy". In response, Henley lured a 15-year-old acquaintance named William Ray Lawrence to Corll's Pasadena residence upon the promise of fishing with himself and Corll at
Lake Sam Rayburn in
San Augustine County. Lawrence last phoned his father to state he and "some friends" were traveling to Lake Sam Rayburn, but that he would return to Houston in "two, three days ... maybe Thursday." Due to the fact Corll "really liked [Lawrence]", the teenager was kept alive for three days, throughout which he was almost continually bound to Corll's bed. After three days of abuse and torture, Lawrence was strangled to death with a
ligature. Corll and Brooks buried his body close to a dirt road at Lake Sam Rayburn the following evening as Henley kept a lookout in Corll's
Ford Econoline van. Less than two weeks later, a 20-year-old married man from
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, named Raymond Stanley Blackburn was abducted while hitchhiking from the Heights to
Louisiana to see his wife and newborn child; he was strangled to death by Corll and buried at Lake Sam Rayburn. Blackburn had arrived in Houston three months before his abduction to work on a construction project. Three weeks later, on July 6, Henley began attending classes at the Coaches Driving School in
Bellaire, Texas, where he became acquainted with a 15-year-old named Homer Louis Garcia. The following day, Garcia telephoned his mother to say he was spending the night with a friend from the driving school, whom he refused to name; he was shot and left to bleed to death in Corll's bathtub before his body was buried at Lake Sam Rayburn. Five days later, on July 12, a 17-year-old
Orange County youth and
U.S. Marine named John Manning Sellars was shot to death with a rifle and buried at High Island Beach. The day after Sellars' disappearance, Brooks married his pregnant 15-year-old fiancée, Bridget Clark; the two moved into an apartment together, although he continued to maintain contact with Corll and Henley. On July 19, Corll and Henley encountered 15-year-old Michael Anthony Baulch, younger brother of previous victim Billy Baulch, walking home from a barber's shop. He was lured to Corll's residence upon an unknown pretext. Baulch was strangled to death with a cord before his body was buried at Lake Sam Rayburn just from the body of Homer Garcia. Six days later, on Corll's instructions, Henley lured two Heights youths named Charles Cary Cobble (17) and Marty Ray Jones (18) to Corll's home. The trio were last seen by a friend of Henley's named Johnny Reyna walking in single file along 27th Street. Two days later, Jones was strangled to death as Cobble, observing his friend's murder, went into
cardiac arrest; Henley partially
resuscitated Cobble before Corll ordered him to stop. He then shot Cobble twice in the head. Henley buried the youths in the center of Corll's boat shed, with Corll briefly locking him inside the shed while he retrieved bags of
lime to spread over their bodies. On Friday, August 3, Corll encountered a 13-year-old boy from
South Houston named James Stanton Dreymala riding his bicycle close to his parents' home. Upon learning Dreymala was saving money to take his first girlfriend to see the latest
James Bond movie that Sunday, Corll lured the boy to his home on the pretext of his collecting empty glass bottles from his shed to collect the deposit for their return. That evening, Brooks observed Dreymala at Corll's home; he ordered a pizza, which he shared with the boy before leaving him alone with Corll. Dreymala later called his parents to request if he could stay overnight at a party across town; his parents informed him to return home, although shortly thereafter, Dreymala was tied to Corll's torture board, raped, tortured, and strangled with a cord before being buried close to the entrance of Corll's boat shed. ==August 8, 1973==