CO CO - Linda Hutchings, 17, Arvada, 15 August 1979

I worked with Linda's mother at the time she went missing and was found. I was 19 myself at the time. I remember those horrible weeks Linda's mom waited to hear of new her daughter was found. It was at work Sept 1979 that I remember working with Linda's mom when she was summoned to the front desk of the room outside our office because she had detectives waiting for her. We all stopped working and waited. We then heard the gut wrenching screams which came from Linda's mom when they told her she was found dead. Linda's mother came back inside the office and of course was inconsolable. That horrid scream and this tragic story will forever stick with me. So so very very sad. I wish they would have caught the killer. I haven't spoken to Linda's mom in so many years. My heart will always be with her!!!
 
This may be a long shot, but the serial killer Ed Edwards was living in Denver in the summer of 1979 and according to his daughter April's timeline they packed up and left in the middle of the night. Might be worth looking into as this is what the killer did a year later in Wisconsin after he murdered a couple there.

Here is the link to her timeline (scroll down to the bottom and please ignore some of the other claims on the site, which I realise sound a bit crazy): http://coldcasecameron.com/killers-timeline/2000-2011/
 
Well...that article would certainly make one wonder about the boyfriend...drinking heavily, known to have a temper, and "has a bad feeling" the next morning that she didn't make it home?

yeah this is crazy. I’m wondering if they have done DNA testing on her? I know who the boyfriend is / was. He is still a heavy drinker and still has a terrible temper. What doesn’t make sense is that he mentioned he had a bad feeling she didn’t make it home? What would make him say that or think that? This case really makes me wonder about whether he did it or not
 
Here I found this info:
Colorado cold cases, Denver unsolved murders, crimes — The Denver Post"

Victim’s name: Linda Hutchings, 17
Investigative agency: Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office
Date killed: Aug. 15, 1979
Cause of Death: Not disclosed.
Suspect: None

Linda Hutchings burst out of the front door when she saw her older brother Alan strolling up the sidewalk of their Arvada home.

“Look, look,” Linda squealed almost breathless as she pointed up at the sky and thrust binoculars at him.

inf.webp

Linda Hutchings, 17, courtesy of Jefferson County Sheriff's Office

A thunderhead was billowing high above them.

That was Linda, recalled her brother while fighting back tears. The pretty blonde girl, who often flashed a gleaming smile, was thrilled by simple pleasures.

When the family went to her uncle’s cabin in the mountains she would unroll a sleeping bag outside on the pine needles and lay under the stars. She loved nature.

Linda often scampered after squirrels, threw frisbees and when Alan got out his harmonica, she ran into the kitchen to retrieve spoons to play on her knees.

Linda loved to draw portraits of people and animals and dreamed of becoming a professional artist. She would pull out her favorite records and play them over and over.

The last time her family heard her joyous voice was on Aug. 15, 1979. On that day she went to her boyfriend’s apartment in Lakewood.

Family friend Ron Weaver said her boyfriend was several years older than Linda. He was drinking heavily that night. There was a good chance they were also using drugs, acknowledged Linda’s brother Alan.

Weaver said her boyfriend fell asleep. She was going to school the next morning and had to get home. Her boyfriend had a temper and she didn’t want to wake him up, he said.

She left a note in the early morning hours saying she was headed home. She didn’t mention how she was going to get there, whether she found someone to give her a ride.

Linda was wearing white jeans, a white peasant-style top with embroidery and tennis shoes. She may have been wearing a red coat.

It was too far to walk, so friends and family believe she did what many teens did back then: hitch-hike.

Later that morning, the frantic boyfriend drove to the Hutchings’ home. He had a bad feeling about it. He was right. Linda hadn’t made it home, Alan Hutchings said.

Carmalina Hutchings, Linda’s mother, immediately called Arvada police. She was very worried. But a police officer told her that she probably just ran away. He told the family more time had to pass before she could file a missing person’s report.

“We were in a panic and they kept insisting there was no problem,” Alan Hutchings said.

But Linda had never run away from home before. She had always been reliable and loved school.

The Hutchings family looked everywhere they thought she might go including truck stops and called everyone they knew who had any contact with her with no luck.

The tall girl with an effervescent personality had vanished.

Two weeks later, a family was doing the same kind of thing Linda would love to do – picking cattails – when they made a gruesome discovery.

Linda’s body had been tossed down an embankment near Indiana and West 82nd Avenue. Whoever left her body had beaten her, said Cheryl Moore, cold case investigator for the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office.

Soon afterward, professed serial killer Henry Lee Lucas confessed to Linda’s murder as part of a nation-wide rampage in which he killed 600. But his boasts would prove to be lies and he later recanted. No new suspect has been identified, Moore said.

“It’s just a huge mystery,” Weaver said. “Who did she run into that night? Who murdered her? It was a sad shocking thing to all of us.”

Moore said no DNA tests have yet been performed in her case.

Alan Hutchings said he hopes authorities do everything they can to solve his sister’s murder including DNA tests.

Contact information: Cheryl Moore of the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office can be reached at (303) 271-5625, or cmoore@jeffco.us.
Denver Post reporter Kirk
 
Hello! I'm new to this site and created an account to comment on this thread.

Carm is my grandma, Linda would have been my aunt though she passed before I was born. My dad, Phil, is one of the 2 surviving children of my grandma out of 5. My grandma helped raise my sister and I as our dad was a single parent. She is doing great by the way! 92 years young and still gardening, drawing and doodling, and making sure everyone has a full belly.
I just wanted to say how extremely heartwarming it is to hear my aunt linda is still in peoples hearts and on their minds. My grandma's house is decorated in pictures of all of her children, though she has full canvas sized printed of Dale and Linda.
Growing up, there were stories of Linda but never information about what happened. My dad has always felt guilt around her disappearance because everything happened just a few days after his birthday. Every couple of months I like to look up any and all information I can find on Aunt Linda. Before his death, my uncle alan tried to reopen the case to have her death investigated but after everything my grandma has been through, it is not kind to reopen her wounds like that. She still grieves her death daily and takes frequent trips to her grave.
I would very much like to know what happened to aunt Linda, if not for myself but for our entire family.
 
Hello! I'm new to this site and created an account to comment on this thread.

Carm is my grandma, Linda would have been my aunt though she passed before I was born. My dad, Phil, is one of the 2 surviving children of my grandma out of 5. My grandma helped raise my sister and I as our dad was a single parent. She is doing great by the way! 92 years young and still gardening, drawing and doodling, and making sure everyone has a full belly.
I just wanted to say how extremely heartwarming it is to hear my aunt linda is still in peoples hearts and on their minds. My grandma's house is decorated in pictures of all of her children, though she has full canvas sized printed of Dale and Linda.
Growing up, there were stories of Linda but never information about what happened. My dad has always felt guilt around her disappearance because everything happened just a few days after his birthday. Every couple of months I like to look up any and all information I can find on Aunt Linda. Before his death, my uncle alan tried to reopen the case to have her death investigated but after everything my grandma has been through, it is not kind to reopen her wounds like that. She still grieves her death daily and takes frequent trips to her grave.
I would very much like to know what happened to aunt Linda, if not for myself but for our entire family.
I went to school with Linda & Kenny. Alan was a few years older than me and I remember laying in their backyard after she was found talking to Alan, it was so very sad. I didn’t know Alan had passed but understand Kenny is still around, friends with many associated friends on Facebook. I lived one block over from them on Lynn Drive, they lived on Jellison. When this happened it was horrible… I remember going to the house to get Kenny so we could go to school and there was a beautiful photo of Linda above a piano I think. Carmalina would always say a prayer to Kenny before he left. They need to do DNA test, why on earth has it not been done? The clothes she was wearing are a memory, the shirt had white billowed sleeves and the embroidery was gold and blue I think. She was very tall and thin with beautiful shiny, shiny hair.
 
Richard, the link I've posted has a photo and description.
Hi Richard. I went to school with Linda and where she was found was the street going to Leyden Lake which was a popular party spot. What is so weird is why someone took her there. Being a school night there wouldn’t be any parties so I think whoever did this knew her and this area. Also, when we would party there, a big Indian guy named “Turtle” would show up, he was very weird and would get plowed drunk. I have always felt he had something to do with this.
 
Hello! I'm new to this site and created an account to comment on this thread.

Carm is my grandma, Linda would have been my aunt though she passed before I was born. My dad, Phil, is one of the 2 surviving children of my grandma out of 5. My grandma helped raise my sister and I as our dad was a single parent. She is doing great by the way! 92 years young and still gardening, drawing and doodling, and making sure everyone has a full belly.
I just wanted to say how extremely heartwarming it is to hear my aunt linda is still in peoples hearts and on their minds. My grandma's house is decorated in pictures of all of her children, though she has full canvas sized printed of Dale and Linda.
Growing up, there were stories of Linda but never information about what happened. My dad has always felt guilt around her disappearance because everything happened just a few days after his birthday. Every couple of months I like to look up any and all information I can find on Aunt Linda. Before his death, my uncle alan tried to reopen the case to have her death investigated but after everything my grandma has been through, it is not kind to reopen her wounds like that. She still grieves her death daily and takes frequent trips to her grave.
I would very much like to know what happened to aunt Linda, if not for myself but for our entire family.
Hello. I went to school with Kenny and Linda, I was in the same grade as Kenny. I still remember the fabric sewn into Kenny's pants legs to make them super bell bottoms in the 6th grade, it was quite impressive. I didn't know Linda well but I would see her hitchiking home from Arvada West sometimes and I would pick her up and drop her off at Grandview and Independence then go down the hill to Johnson St. where I lived, I think I drove her to her house maybe once or twice because I remember vaguely what the house looked like. I remember her being funny, nice, and outgoing. It was really devastating when we found out what happened to her, very hard as a teenager to think that could happen in our little part of the world and to think what she went through. I really hope the case is solved someday.
 
Hi Richard. I went to school with Linda and where she was found was the street going to Leyden Lake which was a popular party spot. What is so weird is why someone took her there. Being a school night there w6uldn’t be any parties so I think whoever did this knew her and this area. Also, when we would party there, a big Indian guy named “Turtle” would show up, he was very weird and would get plowed drunk. I have always felt he had something to do with this.
hi MambaV. I've not been on here in years. I remember the Leyden parties...and knew about Turtle. I remember hearing that rumour when I returned to Arvada in 1980 and always used to hear he was a bit odd or a nutter. I never met him, but used to see him from a distance from time to time, driving a VW beetle. I was partying with friends that night, and we went to the Hutchings family home. We had a nice chat with Linda's mom, and I recall seeing the photo of Linda in a prominent place on the wall. I'm guessing it was her senior photo--it's the same one you can see online. I never stop thinking about her. Every year in Aug./Sept. I get a bit melancholy, thinking about her and all. I really hope the case is solved, too. I keep thinking...'I'm 62 now...she'd be 61 this year, and I wonder what her life would have been like.
 
I went to school with Linda & Kenny. Alan was a few years older than me and I remember laying in their backyard after she was found talking to Alan, it was so very sad. I didn’t know Alan had passed but understand Kenny is still around, friends with many associated friends on Facebook. I lived one block over from them on Lynn Drive, they lived on Jellison. When this happened it was horrible… I remember going to the house to get Kenny so we could go to school and there was a beautiful photo of Linda above a piano I think. Carmalina would always say a prayer to Kenny before he left. They need to do DNA test, why on earth has it not been done? The clothes she was wearing are a memory, the shirt had white billowed sleeves and the embroidery was gold and blue I think. She was very tall and thin with beautiful shiny, shiny hair.
I'm so sorry to hear about Alan. Lovely fella. I remember running into him and a couple of other old pals at least a couple of times in the early 80s at nightclubs in Denver...gigs or something. I was living in Capitol Hill by then.
I've been wondering about DNA. I'm not surprised they gave the old 'she ran away' answer when the family reported her missing. I've read and listened to so many podcasts about similar responses pre-2000s in the US and here in the UK, where I live now, that follow the same pattern...oh, they've just run away. Not even listening to the families who knew otherwise.
 

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