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Who Killed Betsy Aardsma?

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  • Who Killed Betsy Aardsma?

    This particular unsolved murder fascinated me the moment I read it.

    Betsy Aardsma was a 22 year-old college student who was murdered in the stacks of Pattee Library, Pennsylvania State University in 1969.

    Aardsma was in the library on November 28, 1969, doing research for a paper. At some point between 4:45 PM and 4:55 PM, she was stabbed a single time through the heart with a knife. She fell and a minute or so later, one or two men exited the central region of the library telling a desk clerk that "Somebody better help that girl" as they left. The man or men who spoke to the desk clerk have never been identified. Bystanders rendered first aid, including mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, to Aardsma[3] and a call was placed to the campus hospital, the Ritenour Health Center, at 5:01 PM. By 5:19 PM, an ambulance[3] had transported Aardsma to the Health Center, where she was pronounced dead a short time later.[2]

    After Aardsma was stabbed, the wound produced only a small amount of visible blood. Also, Aardsma was wearing a red dress at the time. As result of these two facts, the first responders thought that perhaps she had experienced a seizure or some other medical ailment. It was not until Aardsma was examined at the Health Center that anyone realized that she had been stabbed.
    After the initial flurry of activity in 1969, the investigation petered out, although over the years a few intriguing developments have cropped up.

    On Nov. 28, 1994, the 25th anniversary of the murder, a library worker found a candle burning in the aisle where Betsy was killed. On the floor was a message scrawled in red marker: "R.I.P. Betsy Aardsma, born July 11, 1947, died November 28, 1969. I'm back."

    Near the message, the worker also found original copies of news stories about the case, although some of those would have been available in the library. Another shrine appeared in 1999, but not in the same place. Police suspect both incidents were pranks.

    Then there was the postcard mailed from Atlanta to campus police in the 1970s that said, "You never did catch the guy who killed that [expletive] in the library."

  • #2
    It is a very bizarre case indeed and I just heard of it about 4 years ago.

    First in the unsolved murder A-Z opposite Tammy Zywicki,
    .
    Last edited by sdreid; 08-06-2014, 02:47 PM.
    This my opinion and to the best of my knowledge, that is, if I'm not joking.

    Stan Reid

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    • #3
      Hey sdreid,

      What do you make of the guy who told the receptionist "Somebody better help that girl"? If this was indeed the killer, then he certainly was a brazen one, since he could have happily slipped out of the library and allowed someone to stumble upon Betsy's body, buying himself more time.

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      • #4
        Hi Harry:

        I'm not sure if he was the killer but, yes, he was brazen if he was.

        The murder is on some Zodiac sites; maybe because it is a little like the murder of Cheri Jo Bates. Bates may not be a Zodiac killing either though.
        This my opinion and to the best of my knowledge, that is, if I'm not joking.

        Stan Reid

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        • #5
          http://lancasteronline.com/news/loca...e046975bc.html is a fairly substantial article on the case.
          - Ginger

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          • #6
            I remember reading on Websleuths that the stabbing only just nicked Besty's aorta and had it missed she probably would've survived and been able to identify her attacker. The whole nature of the attack, taking place in a public library in the middle of the day, and the killer probably tipping off the desk clerk on their way out, suggests a thrill kill to me and not so much a personal one. Perhaps someone who had planned to murder a poor unsuspecting girl in the library that day, and Betsy unfortunately happened to be her.

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            • #7
              Yes, there are close to 2000 posts about the case over on Websleuths.
              This my opinion and to the best of my knowledge, that is, if I'm not joking.

              Stan Reid

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