The crime for which Fox paid with his life was his first criminal conviction, but Fox had been increasingly aggressive toward women in the months before the murder of 18-year-old Leslie Renae Keckler, testimony at his trial revealed. The victim of a previous encounter with Fox helped police break the case. On September 14, 1989, Leslie Keckler applied for a waitress job at a
Bowling Green restaurant where Fox worked as a grill cook. As Keckler was filling out her job application, Fox pointed out Keckler to a coworker and said, "I'd like to have some of that," the coworker testified later. Fox gleaned Keckler's telephone number from the application and asked her to meet him for an interview for a restaurant supply sales job. On September 26, Keckler went to a local motel where Fox had arranged the job interview. Keckler's boyfriend saw her just before she left, and Keckler told him she might be gone for two or three hours. When Keckler did not return that night, her boyfriend and mother filed a missing persons report with the police. Police found the car Keckler had been driving abandoned at a local mall. Two boys riding bicycles found Keckler's body in a rural drainage ditch four days later. Keckler was still wearing her new black dress and leather jacket. However, a clasp on her brassiere was broken, her belt was unbuckled, two dress buttons were missing, and her pantyhose was torn in the crotch. Aside from a nearby shoe, police found no other evidence at the scene. ==Wounds==