Seattle Times and Post-Intelligencer articles for 1982 and 1983. The 1983 articles are particularly interesting and include interviews with Bob Keppel, Ann Rule, and a long piece on John Henry Browne by Richard Larsen..
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"Keppel disputes Bundy's main claim that the killer derived more satisfaction from stalking the victims than actually killing them. "Looking at what he had done to those girls, the massive amount of injury he did to their bodies, if he just wanted to kill them, and cause no pain and suffering, he could have done it in a different way," Keppel says.
Bundy recounts a case in which the killer met one victim in a Burien bar in the summer of 1974, and drank heavily with her before they left together in the early morning hours. The killer, Bundy says, engaged in drunken sex with Brenda Ball and then quietly strangled her after she had passed out.
While Bundy's description lack any mention of frenzied violence Keppel says the fractures later found on Ball's skull told a different story.
"There was a mammoth amount of head injury on the skull," he says..."