Manage episode 508335815 series 3684293
Three seemingly unrelated murders across Westchester County are linked to the same serial killer over a decade later.
In this episode, Adrienne Barker and Joseph Lobosco unpack the Westchester Serial Killer case: three attacks between 1987 and 1990—Michelle Walker in Yonkers, Patricia Englund, and Lisa Gibbons in Tuckahoe—initially investigated by different departments with different M.O.s, then unified years later by hard DNA science. The trail leads back to a familiar name from day one: Patrick Baxter. A task-force push in 2000, a court-ordered DNA sample while Baxter was already in state custody, a clean match across the murders, and a 2002 conviction that finally delivered justice.
What you’ll hear:
→ Michelle Walker (1987, Yonkers): a 14-year-old runs an evening errand, takes the Old Croton Aqueduct footpath, and is found murdered—smothered; early canvass puts an 18-year-old local, Patrick Baxter, on police radar but a legal technicality blocks questioning.
→ Patricia Englund (New Year’s, 1988): disappears; her body is found weeks later; assault and signs of asphyxiation; Yonkers and Greenburgh launch a joint inquiry amid rising fear.
→ Lisa Gibbons (July 17, 1990, Tuckahoe/Crestwood): a 25-year-old on her commuter route is attacked and sexually assaulted near the train path, then executed with a sawed-off shotgun; purse and jewelry taken.
→ Why the cases didn’t connect in real time: different jurisdictions, different signatures (smothering vs. shotgun), victims unknown to one another, miles apart—classic siloed investigations.
→ The break: late-1990s/2000 DNA testing ties Walker and Gibbons to the same unknown male; cold-case team expands the scope; forensic hits stack up.
→ Zeroing in on Baxter: technicians pull a court-ordered DNA sample while he’s serving time on unrelated charges; the profile matches all three murders—Walker, Englund, Gibbons.
→ Indictment and trial: fall 2000 charges; 2002 Westchester County Court trial in White Plains; jury convicts on multiple counts of murder and sexual assault; sentence ensures Baxter won’t see freedom again (effectively a life term).
→ Takeaways: how evidence preservation and modern DNA cracked a three-victim, multi-jurisdiction serial; the cost of investigative silos; and the families’ decade-long fight for answers.
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⚖️ Disclaimer
Debate the News: True Crime Edition is for informational and discussion purposes only. We are not attorneys, law enforcement officers, or forensic experts. While we research each case, the show is recorded live with little to no editing; any factual errors are unintentional. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Listener discretion is advised. Guest and audience views are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of the hosts.
Speakers
→ Adrienne Barker — Host
→ Joseph Lobosco — Host
→ Debbie Dowling — Guest Host
→ Angie — Guest Contributor
→ Mariana — Guest Contributor
→ Lisa — Guest Contributor
Credits:
"Debate The News: True Crime"
Created by: Jonathan Bing, Adrienne Barker and Joseph R. Lobosco
Producers: Adrienne Barker, Joseph R. Lobosco, Jonathan Bing
Writers: Adrienne Barker & Joseph R. Lobosco
Editor: Joseph R. Lobosco
Cover Art: Joseph R. Lobosco
Special Thanks: Nelson, Lea, Nawzil, and the entire Chatter Social team
Theme Song: Alaina Cross — “Karma” [NCS Release]
Music provided by NoCopyrightSounds
Free Download/Stream: http://ncs.io/karma
Watch: http://ncs.lnk.to/karmaAT/youtube
🎧 A Debate the News: True Crime Production
📍 Recorded Live on Chatter Social | Hosted by Joseph Lobosco & Adrienne Barker
27 episodes