TX - Cheryl Henry & Andy Atkinson, Houston, 21 Aug 1990, MEDIA/MAPS/TIMELINES *NO DISCUSSION *

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Can you help solve some of Houston's most infamous cold cases?

Jay R. Jordan | August 21, 2019

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Photo: Houston Police Department

Cheryl Henry and Andy Atkinson

“Murdered on Wednesday, August 22, 1990, in the 1300 block of Enclave Round

Known as the “Lover's Lane Case,” Cheryl Henry and Andy Atkinson were last seen at Bayou Mama’s Nightclub around 10:45 p.m. The next day, neither one reported to work, so a missing person’s report was filed. A Sysco Food Security Guard spotted Atkinson’s abandoned vehicle in the 1300 block of Enclave Round, part of an undeveloped business park. Officers found Henry’s nude body on the property, while Atkinson’s body was later found not far from the body of Henry. They both were brutally murdered.”


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Photo: Houston Police Department

“Years later, in August 2001, a DNA profile from a sexual assault matched the DNA evidence from the Lover’s Lane Case. The victim of the 2001 sexual assault provided detectives with a sketch of the possible suspect. Anyone with information about this murder is urged to contact the HPD Cold Case Squad at 713-308-3618 or Crime Stoppers at 713-222-TIPS (8477).”
 
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Missing Pieces: Police using new technology to help solve 'Lovers Lane murders'

Author: Shern-Min Chow
November 17, 2017

“HOUSTON - Cold case detectives are trying a relatively new DNA approach to the notorious Lovers Lane murders. The brutal killings remain one of Houston's most infamous unsolved slayings.”

[...]

“The case now belongs to Houston Police detective Darcus Shorten. Shorten says,”

[...]

“So Detective Shorten is trying something relatively unusual, explaining, “Familial DNA is something new.””

[...]

“While investigators await those results, DNA testing has already made one important, though very late, link: Two months before the murders, an exotic dancer was raped in north Harris County. DNA testing was relatively new and expensive. It would take 17 years for HPD's beleaguered crime lab, to run the sample. It turned out to be a match to the Lovers Lane killer.”
 
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Houston's Creepiest Unsolved Murder Mysteries

ANGELICA LEICHT | OCTOBER 31, 2014 |

“Lover's Lane Murders

The 1990 The Lover's Lane murder case is one of the most notorious unsolved homicides in Houston's history, and for good reason.

On August 23, 1990, 22-year-old Cheryl Henry and her 21-year-old boyfriend, Andy Atkinson, headed out for the night and didn't return. They were found brutally murdered the next day in an undeveloped, wooded area in West Houston that had been dubbed "Lover's Lane" for its reputation as a make-out spot.

The couple was not found in their car, but in the woods nearby. Cheryl had been raped and then killed. Her throat was slashed, and the killer had covered her naked body up with boards.

Andy was found tied to a tree, his throat also slashed. Reports say he was nearly decapitated. At the crime scene, police say they found a golf club lying in a field, along with three golf balls, one lined up after the other. They pointed the way to Cheryl's body.

There were also four partially deflated balloons found tied to the tree above Cheryl's body, and a crisp $20 bill was lying next to her.

According to Gary Atkinson, Andy's father, investigators told him that they believe Andy let the killer tie him to a tree. They also know that Cheryl was killed first, which means Andy was forced to listen to her scream, but was unable to help.

There has been some progress on the case in recent years. The Harris County Sheriff's Department says it has linked the grisly murders to another unsolved rape and burglary that was committed months before the Lover's Lane murders, but the case remains unsolved.“
 
10 Notorious Unsolved Texas Murders

CHRISTIAN MCPHATE | MAY 17, 2016 |

“Cheryl Henry and Andy Atkinson
August 1990

In a case known as the “Lover’s Lane Murders,” 22-year-old Cheryl Henry and 21-year-old Andy Atkinson were found murdered in an undeveloped Houston woodland dubbed “Lover’s Lane” not far from their parked car. Atkinson was found tied to a tree with his throat slashed to the point of decapitation, and the killer used golf clubs lined up one after the other to point police toward Henry’s naked body buried underneath a stack of boards. Four partially deflated balloons were tied to a tree next to her body, and a crisp $20 lay next to her; she’d been raped, and her throat had been also slashed.”
 
Post by Verified Insider @mocity
Mar 17, 2005

“I have never posted on a website about this but I thought I might post here. I am including a recent article from the Houston Chronicle about my step-sisters murder in 1990. The article ran on 12/8/04.”

Note may hold clues in 'lovers lane' slayings
Police hope note brings answers
Letter was sent to HPD 10 years after 1990 slayings on 'lovers lane'

S.K. BARDWELL
Houston Chronicle|December 8, 2004

“Hoping to reinvigorate their investigation of a 14-year-old homicide case, Houston police have released a handwritten note that may have come from the architect of two of the city's most gruesome slayings.

The letter, postmarked in Houston, was received in March 2001, more than 10 years after Cheryl Henry and Andy Atkinson were stabbed to death as they parked on a secluded cul-de-sac in west Harris County.

"It's the kind of case everyone remembers," Houston police Sgt. Billy Belk said. "It sticks in your mind."

In block letters, the note's sender told investigators, "If you want to know who killed C. Henry and A. Atkinson, it will cost $100,000." The note told investigators to reply in the classifieds section of the March 12, 2001, Houston Chronicle and warned, "a lawyer will be hired to make sure u play straight."

The note was answered, according to instructions. "We do want to know what you know about Henry /Atkinson," the classified ad read. A number was given for the note-sender or a lawyer to contact investigators "with directions on playing straight."

Through the years, police had gotten calls whenever an anniversary or other publicity brings the case back to the public's attention.

The timing of the note, postmarked March 1, 2001, was odd, Belk said, in that it came so long after the slayings, and during a period when the case was getting no publicity. The most recent news story about the case, a 10-year retrospective, had been published Sept. 13, 2000.

Note suppressed

The possibilities the note offered were enticing to investigators sitting at yet another dead end in the case, and Belk said the note was never publicized.

"We kept pretty tight-lipped about it," he said, "to see if we got a response."

They never did.

Today, investigators say, it's a pretty sure bet that whoever sent the note does not intend to contact police again. Belk hopes that by releasing the contents of the note someone may recognize the handwriting, the language or some other scrap of information when it is published.

Cheryl Henry , 22, was home for the summer from classes at Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches. Andy Atkinson, whose 22nd birthday was only days away, had just moved home after finishing college in North Carolina.

The two left on a date the evening of Aug. 21, 1990, along with Henry 's younger sister, Shane, and her escort. The sisters said their goodbyes when the couples left the Bayou Mama club near Westheimer and Gessner late that night.

Neither Henry nor Atkinson returned from their date; their families reported them missing early the next day. On the evening of Aug. 22, a Houston patrol officer spotted Atkinson's car parked on Enclave Round, a then-undeveloped area off the 1300 block of Enclave Parkway that young people often used as a "lovers lane."

Blood in the car appeared fresh. When a computer check of the vehicle's license plate showed it belonged to a missing person, a tracking dog was called to search the nearby heavy woods.

The dog led police to Henry 's body about 200 yards away. Her clothes, found nearby, had been cut from her body, probably with the same knife used to slash her throat. Her hands were bound behind her with hemp rope. Her killer had tried to cover her body with boards from a rotting cedar fence.

A bunch of deflated balloons hung Dali-like over a tree limb near Henry 's body, having no apparent connection with her death but adding to the surreal quality of the grim scene.

Darkness halted the search for Atkinson. A Houston police officer was posted to stand watch until dawn, when searchers returned and quickly discovered the second body.

Atkinson was found about 100 yards from Henry . He was fully clothed, his hands tied behind him with similar rope. He had been seated with his back against a tree trunk before his throat was slashed. He still had his money and watch.

The young couple had evidently parked to neck, Belk said. The car's front seats were reclined, the engine had been turned off but the key left in the auxiliary position so the music would stay on. Henry 's shoes and bag were in the front floorboard.

Suspects cleared

In the first months, investigators chased hundreds of leads. Several potential suspects were identified.

Cheryl Henry 's killer had raped her, and left behind DNA. One by one, all the suspects were cleared through DNA comparisons.

Problems within HPD's DNA lab began unfolding in 2002 and ultimately resulted in the lab's closure and the retesting of hundreds of DNA samples, but Belk is confident in the work done on the DNA left by Henry 's killer.

That DNA was profiled at the DNA lab founded at Baylor College of Medicine by renowned researcher Dr. C. Thomas Caskey, Belk said. The sample was entered into the state's Combined DNA Indexing System, but a link was never made to any other crime.

The sample from Henry 's killer was later sent by HPD to the Texas Department of Public Safety for comparison with DNA from Angel Maturino Resendiz, a convicted rail-riding serial killer. That didn't provide a match either, Belk said.

Last month, Belk and members of Henry 's family met with Houston Police Chief Harold Hurtt, who approved the independent retesting of all the DNA samples taken from possible suspects and eliminated through tests done at HPD's lab, Belk said.

He said the case has never gone completely cold.

"We've gotten at least one new lead every year," Belk said, "and I follow up on every one of them."

Noting that most investigators have at least one case they can't let go of, Belk said, "This is mine."

If the case has haunted Belk, it has tortured Barbara Craig, Henry 's mother.

"I was always so proud of Cheryl ," Craig said recently. "She was the older sister to five other kids. ... The youngest, the twins, were just starting fifth grade that year. Their first day of school was spent at their sister's funeral."

Her daughter's death devastated the family, Craig said. The details made it almost too painful to bear.

"To be killed is horrible," Craig said, "But to be terrorized, tied up, raped ... To think her last moments were of terror, and I wasn't there. Because mothers, you know, that's their job, to make it better."

Several scenarios

Craig said finding the person who killed her daughter and Atkinson is important to the family, although "we try not to base our happiness on whether or not the person is caught."

Atkinson's father could not be reached for comment.

Belk acknowledges the note could be a hoax, but he said it is difficult to see what reward there could be in such a deception. The other possibilities are that the note is from the killer, or from someone who could identify the killer.

The latter would probably be the best news for Belk. In a study published in the Journal of Criminal Justice and Popular Culture in 2002, Seattle University journalism professor Tomas Guillen looked at a half-dozen killers who contacted police or the media before their capture, and concluded that while the killers' missives often helped police link previously unlinked crimes, or proved pivotal in helping convict the offenders once they were caught, they rarely helped identify a killer.

"Although these killers injected themselves into cases, sometimes repeatedly for years, with poems, letters, and telephone calls to investigators or the news media, the communiques did not lead to enough investigative evidence or clues to put an immediate end to a series of slayings," Guillen wrote.

All Belk wants is some foothold he can use to push the case closer to its resolution.

Anyone with information in the case can call Belk at 713-308-3600, or Crime Stoppers at 713-222-TIPS.

...

Houston homicide investigators want to know who wrote them an anonymous letter regarding the 1990 slayings of Cheryl Henry and Andy Atkinson. Their bodies were found near a secluded cul-de-sac in west Harris County. Police got the letter three years ago and are releasing it now in hope that someone with information will come forward.

The letter demanded $100,000 in exchange for the killer’s identity and asked police to respond through the Houston Chronicle’s ``personal column.’’

The letter writer warned that a lawyer would be hired ``to make sure u play straight.’’”
 
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Post from discussion thread on April 11, 2006 by user @Dark Knight:

“HOUSTON -- Authorities hope a reward will help bring someone forward with clues about a couple killed 15 years ago in an area of west Houston once known as Lovers Lane.

Officers with the Houston Police Department found the bodies of Cheryl Henry, 22, and Andy Atkinson, 21, on Aug. 23, 1990, about 100 yards apart in a wooded area that is now a business park in the 1300 block of Enclave Round.

Investigators said they have run extensive DNA tests on evidence found at the scene and have interviewed dozens of possible suspects but nothing has led to an arrest.

Police said that the killer raped Henry, leaving behind his DNA. Both victims' throats were slashed.

"The ethnicity of the individual who left the suspect sample is 100 percent European," said Sgt. Billy Belk, with the Houston Police Department.

Investigators believe more than one person was involved in the killings.

Authorities released a note that surfaced in 2000, 10 years after the couple was killed. In the note, the writer demanded $100,000 to reveal the killers' identities. Investigators said the note was anonymously mailed to investigators in March 2001. No one ever came forward and the letter-writer was never found.

The victims' families spoke at a Crime Stoppers news conference Tuesday morning.

"He won't have a family, children, grandchildren. I'll never have grandchildren," Atkinson's mother, Ann Fowler said.

The families hope someone will recognize the handwriting in the note.

"School teachers -- people who've known people who've written like this -- bankers," father Bob Henry said.

A $5,000 reward is being offered for information that leads to an arrest and conviction in these cases. Anyone with information should call Crime Stoppers at (713) 222-TIPS.

http://www.officer.com/article/article.jsp?siteSection=7&id=25590
 
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Post from discussion thread by @Sleuthster:

DNA may help break notorious 'Lover's Lane' murders
After 18 years, a possible break in 'Lover's Lane' case
DNA evidence heats up probe of one of Houston's most notorious brutal killings

LINDSAY WISE
lindsay.wise@chron.com
Houston Chronicle | May 19, 2008


“Homicide detective Billy Belk had few regrets when he retired last year after two decades with the Houston Police Department's murder squad.

One case still haunted him, though.
In the summer of 1990, the bodies of Cheryl Henry, 22, and her boyfriend, Garland "Andy" Atkinson, 21, were found in an undeveloped, wooded area of western Harris County where young people often went to park and kiss. Both had been tied up with rope and their throats slashed. Henry had been raped.

"That was one of the few cases over my career that I didn't solve that I really wanted to solve really bad," said Belk, 50. "I've gone all over the country chasing down leads on the case, every one of them ending in a dead end."

Finally, the week after he retired, Belk got the call he'd been waiting 17 years for: DNA evidence from semen found in Henry's body had been matched to DNA collected in the unsolved 1990 rape of a 30-year-old exotic dancer who worked at GiGi's, a topless club on Northwest Freeway.

Henry had worked at a similar club, Rick's Cabaret, on Bering. Atkinson occasionally worked the door at Dreams Street, a club on Winrock managed by his father.

Now, for the first time, investigators are considering the possibility the man who attacked them frequented or worked at local strip clubs.

On Friday, investigators released a composite sketch of the suspect after talking to the rape victim, now a 48-year-old Realtor. It's a major break in the high-profile cold case.

"This is the most promising lead we've had," Belk said. "Scientific evidence doesn't lie."

At HPD, a legendary case

The brutal "Lover's Lane" slayings rank as one of Houston's most notorious unsolved murder mysteries — a case that's achieved legendary status in HPD's homicide division. Rookie detectives are encouraged to read the massive file, which fills two large cardboard boxes.

"It's a bad Hollywood movie," said Michael Miller, an HPD homicide investigator who inherited the case from Belk, his former partner. "Somebody came up on them, tied them up and marched them out to the woods. These two knew they were going to die."

At the time of the couple's deaths, police had few clues. There were no eyewitnesses and little physical evidence other than the semen sample.
DNA profiling was still in its infancy, and the HPD crime lab had yet to set up the necessary technology.

Belk had to get special permission from the department to have the DNA lab at Baylor College of Medicine process the sample. The resulting profile was entered into the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS). But a link was never found to any other crime until after the Harris County Sheriff's Office started sending a backlog of old rape kits from unsolved sexual assault cases to be processed at the Medical Examiner's Office, Belk said.

The medical examiner developed DNA profiles and submitted them to CODIS. In October, the database registered a match with a rape that occurred just two months before Henry and Atkinson were killed.

Details still fresh

The victim reported she had left her job at GiGi's about 2 a.m. June 20, 1990, and returned to her boyfriend's house at 7826 Terra Cotta. Her boyfriend, a commercial pilot, was traveling, so she ate takeout alone in the living room.

"Then she walked upstairs heading towards the bedroom and a man popped out of her bedroom door," Miller said.

The man wore a fishnet stocking over his face, black gloves, and a dark shirt and pants that matched, possibly a uniform. He held a long-barrelled handgun in his left hand. "Where's Randy?" he asked, referring to her boyfriend by name.

The man taunted her, putting the gun to her head and cocking it. He bound her hands behind her back with gray duct tape before taking cash from her purse. Then he duct-taped her eyes and mouth shut, threw her on the bed and shoved a bag or pillowcase over her head.

"He became very vulgar with her while he was raping her, and he told her she wasn't very observant, that he had a military uniform, which was probably him trying to throw her off the fact that he might've had a security guard uniform on," Miller said.

After he finished, the man ordered the woman to lie on the floor and not move. "I may be in the house for an hour or for five minutes," he said.
The woman later discovered he'd disconnected the phone and put the receiver under the mattress.

When Miller tracked the woman down in Galveston County, she still remembered her attacker's features through the fishnet stocking. On Friday, she described him for Lois Gibson, HPD's forensic artist.

She said he was a white man in his mid-30s, about 6 feet tall and 180 pounds with brown hair, brown eyes, a possible mustache and olive skin.

Miller hopes someone will recognize the sketch. He also wants to hear from other women the man might have raped.

"We know there are other victims," he said. "I still think he's out there, and he is who he is — a rapist and a killer. He still could be doing this today."

Budding romance cut short

Henry met Atkinson while she was home for the summer from Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches.

Henry wasn't the type of girl who got worked up over a boy, but she fell head over heels for Atkinson, her stepsister Cristl Craig said.

Atkinson had recently moved to the Houston area from North Carolina, where he'd completed a semester at Campbell University before deciding to relocate closer to his father's family.

The young man found a job at Gold's Gym on the Gulf Freeway and moved in with his grandmother in Meyerland.
He'd only known Henry for about two weeks when he met her for a date at Bayou Mama's nightclub on Westheimer on Aug. 22, 1990.

Henry's younger sister, Shane Henry Blaine, had a drink with them. "I think I said, 'Get a room' a couple of times that night," Blaine recalled with a smile. "It was sort of during that exciting time of a new relationship."

About 11:30 p.m., Blaine said goodnight to her sister and left.

"We kissed each other goodbye and told each other we loved each other, but that's what we always did," she said. "And that's the last time I saw her."

The next day, a guard patrolling an industrial park in western Harris County came across Atkinson's white Honda Civic parked in an isolated cul-de-sac with the key still in the ignition. The seats were reclined and a cassette tape was in the deck, as if the couple had been listening to music.

A brutal crime scene

It wasn't long before anxious family members converged on the scene, along with patrol cars, helicopters and police on horseback. The night was hot, muggy and crawling with bugs. Cadaver dogs searched the partially wooded area, and officers combed the field with flashlights.

They found Henry's body shortly before midnight. She lay facedown, partially hidden under a pile of cedar fence slats. Her hands were bound behind her back with hemp rope, and there were three ragged gashes across her throat.

The next morning, officers found Atkinson's body tied to a tree about 50 yards away. His hands were also bound behind his back, and his throat had been gashed so deeply that his head was nearly severed. His father, Garland Atkinson, couldn't bring himself to go to the morgue to identify the body.

"We were not only father and son but best friends as well," the 58-year-old Katy resident said. "You see things on TV, you read things in the paper, but you never imagine something that drastic, that horrifying, happening to someone you love."

News that authorities have matched DNA evidence from Henry's rape to another assault left both victims' families in a state of nervous tension.
"It's a good thing, even though it brings up a lot of emotions," Craig said. "It's one step closer."”


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Photo: HPD

Investigators have released a composite sketch of the suspect in a 1990 rape of an exotic dancer.
 
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Post by @Ausgirl on Sept.29, 2012 from the discussion thread:

“From the Cheryl & Andy website:

"DNA from their murder is linked to another assault from 1990. Just months before their lives were taken from this world another woman was attacked in Houston. She was able to escape and is thankfully, still alive. Despite the statutes of limitations expiring, making it impossible to arrest him on criminal charges for that specific assault - this courageous and heroic woman came forward to meet with a sketch artist to describe her attacker.

Below is the sketch of the attacker and murderer. Andy was 21 and Cheryl 22 - just beginning to explore life. This man chose to attack, torture and murder Cheryl and Andy. He chose to end their lives and possibly others. "
 
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Source / discussion thread / @zwiebel

“Sketch at link below. DNA links prior rape to two murders.

Published on Sunday, June 15, 2008

New clues in lover's lane murders

By Michael N. Graff
Staff writer
He's probably about 50 now, maybe a little rounder in the midsection, maybe
balding, maybe even with a family of his own.

Or maybe he's still out there raping and killing.

The people who have hated him for nearly two decades can finally picture
him, thanks to a new police sketch.

His eyes are narrow and mean. His chin, strong and cocky. His eyebrows,
perked and uncaring.

Overall, he's handsome and clean-cut.

"Monster," one of his haters says. "Absolute monster."

The sketch, drawn last month after a new round of evidence surfaced, doesn't
account for his aging.

It's time-stamped: 1990.

On Aug. 22 that year, on the west side of Houston, 21-year-old Andy Atkinson
took his new girlfriend down to lover's lane.

Andy, who had moved to Houston from Fayetteville just two months earlier,
had deep dimples and sandy hair. His new girlfriend, 22-year-old Cheryl
Henry, had wavy blond hair and boy-crumbling big eyes.

Good-looking, young and parked in a romantic spot on a steamy late-summer
night - it's no way to die.

From the darkness emerged the man in the sketch. Not so clean-cut. Not so
handsome. Every bit the monster.

Blood splattered in the car. The seats were left down.

He tied Cheryl's hands with hemp rope, took her into the woods, stripped
her, raped her and cut her throat. When he finished, he left her face down
and naked.

About 100 yards away, he left Andy, hands bound behind him with hemp rope,
back leaning against a tree, throat also slashed.

Then the monster left.

For nearly 18 years, from Texas to North Carolina, Atkinson's family members
have had their hopes raised and dashed, and their memories jarred and then
left to fade again. To them, the lover's lane murders are more than just one
of Houston's most notorious crime stories.

It's their nightmare, one they can't escape, one in which the main
characters are their bright-smiled son, his pretty new girlfriend and some
monster.

Now, for the first time, that monster has a face.

He's somewhere today, probably not giving a damn what pain he caused three
people - a father, a mother and a cousin - who knew Andy before he became
the leading role in a Texas murder-mystery.

They knew him for 21 years, almost 22. But like the man in the sketch, the
most recent visuals of Andy are still time-stamped: 1990.

The cousin

The sketch sits beside Tim Godwin's computer at his home in Fayetteville.

"I just hope he's alive," Tim says. "I just hope it's a living person."

Gray shows in Tim's facial hair these days. He'll be 40 in January. Andy
would have been 40 in September.

In the months after Andy's murder, Tim spent several nights curled up near
Andy's headstone at a private family graveyard off U.S. 301 near Hope Mills.

He'd stay there until sunrise or until he was sober, whichever came first.

He'd talk to nobody. He'd drink with nobody. He'd wake up with nobody.

Man, they used to have a good time.

Like when they conned their grandmother into buying them slingshots so they
could flick rocks at the back of the 18-wheelers rolling down Interstate 95.

Like when they helped make the Honeycutt Eagles the best midget football
team in Cumberland County in 1980 - No. 12 and No. 22, an unbeatable pair.

Like when they took that rope swing for ride after ride, splash after
splash, into Permastone Lake.

Like when they worked together at an ice cream shop with a girl they both
liked, a girl named Angela.

Andy was the first to kiss Angela.

Tim wound up marrying her.

Tim and Angela have two children, a boy of 9 and a girl of 5. The boy's name
is Tucker - Tucker Andrew Godwin.

"He was a brother to me," Tim says.

That's not exactly accurate, at least not in the formal family tree. Tim was
Andy's second cousin.

They were raised in separate homes. Tim grew up in a typical family, two
parents and a sister.

Andy lived mostly with his great-grandmother, Shelby, in a yellow-sided
house near a horse farm in Hope Mills. Andy's parents were teenagers when
they had him.

At night, after slingshots were put away, Andy would tell Shelby he wished
his parents would remarry.

"There were times when Shelby would tell me, 'You don't know how lucky you
are,'" Tim remembers.

Though Andy's parents were too young to raise him, they weren't too young to
love him.

The father

Garland Atkinson talks to the sketch.

"Somebody, somewhere, is gonna know you, pal," he'll say. "You just better
hope I don't find you first."

There were times Garland couldn't care anymore.

One night, he remembers lying on his bathroom floor, strung out on cocaine,
when Andy's old dog, Bosley, woke him.

"I didn't care whether I lived or died," Garland said.

Garland was rescued, though. One night on his way to work at a strip bar in
Houston, the police stopped him, found drugs and threw him in jail until
2002.

Garland knows where the man in the sketch should be. He knows it all too
well.

Garland has spent nearly half his life in prison.

"I don't even know why I'm alive," Garland says. "I'm the one that should be
gone. Not Andy."

Andy turned 9 in 1977.

That year, Garland accidentally shot a man in the face during a fight on Hay
Street in Fayetteville after leaving Rick's Lounge. He moved to Houston
after the charges were dropped and had part-time work running drugs all over
the Eastern half of the country. He met some famous friends. Partied with
the guys from Lynyrd Skynyrd before their plane crashed in October. ("They
were just a group of country-*advertiser censored* rednecks, just a bunch of delinquents, just
like I had been in Fayetteville," he says). Made a few runs to Connecticut,
selling cocaine by the quarter-ounce to actress Linda Blair, star of "The
Exorcist."

In December, just after his 27th birthday, he took a flight with a friend
from Houston to Jacksonville, Fla. When he stepped off the plane, he was
arrested. He made national magazines for that one. Thirty-two other people,
including Blair and the children of a Florida state senator, were issued
arrest warrants in the sting.

Throughout middle and high school, Andy visited Garland at least once a
month in prison.

Garland was released in 1984 but violated probation a few times with drunken
driving and worthless check arrests.

By 1988, Garland was out and clean, he said.

Andy had graduated from Terry Sanford in 1987 and went to Campbell for a
couple of semesters.

"He was a clean me," Garland says. "He was as popular as I was, but with a
better class of individual."

Finally, early in the summer of 1990, Garland persuaded Andy to move to
Houston.

The mother

The sketch makes Ann Fowler cry. It reminds her of Andy.

Almost everything does.

She works at a doctor's office in Wilmington. When her co-workers talk about
their children or their grandchildren, Ann can't listen.

It took years before she could say the word "murder."

She spent one of her lunch breaks last week crying on the phone, talking of
a son she wishes she could've gotten to know better.

"I think I'd have a life, because now I don't have a life," Fowler said. "He
would've married and had children. I would've had a baby to hold, because my
baby was taken from me."

Ann met Garland outside a teen club in Fayetteville in 1965.

"Prettiest girl in Cumberland County," Garland still says.

In 1968, when Ann got pregnant with Andy at 16, Garland forged her birth
certificate and took her to South Carolina to get married. Ann had to be
home by midnight.

They divorced shortly after Andy was born. Ann moved to Wilmington to go to
college. Andy stayed with his great-grandmother in Fayetteville.

One night when Andy was about 12, Ann saw a report on the news about a young
man in Florida who was taken out into the woods and killed. She worried that
might one day happen to her son.

She pictured a horrific scenario, with her dad calling.

"Something terrible has happened?" her dad said in her vision.

"It's not about Andy, is it?" she would say back.

"Yes, it is. He's dead," her dad would say.

Ann came to Andy's graduation from Terry Sanford. They hugged and he went
off with his friends afterward.

She always wanted him to move to Wilmington.

Garland still apologizes to Ann sometimes for persuading their son to move
to Houston.

Tim Godwin, the cousin, said Andy would have been happy in either place.

"It wasn't that he didn't want to be here in Fayetteville," Tim says. "He
wanted to know his parents."

Ann never had another child. "My bloodline has ended," she said.

She just moved her mother to Wilmington from Fayetteville last year after
her stepfather died.

That stepfather was Peter Kearns, who helped lead the reinvestigation into
the Jeffrey MacDonald case, one of Fayetteville's most notorious murder
cases, one of those crimes you can't mention over a beer unless you want a
bar-full of opinions and theories.

The city

The sketch moved Houston to action.

Police there have been flooded with calls.

"He looks like my neighbor," people will say.

"Well, what kind of person is your neighbor?" the tip line worker will
respond.

"Oh, he's a good guy."

Most cities have at least one crime people can't quit. The lover's lane
crime is one of Houston's.

"They'll never forget about it," said Mike Miller, the new lead investigator
with the Houston Police Department's Homicide Division Cold Case Squad.

Miller took the case from Billy Belk last year after Belk retired.

Belk told The Houston Chronicle several times that every officer has one
case that forever sticks with him. This is his, he said.

Over the years, investigators have chased dozens of leads. In 1994, they
believed they might be able to track down satellite images of the area where
the murders occurred. But the last available image was from 11p.m., an hour
before Andy and Cheryl were slain.

On a message board for ghost-watchers, people tried to tie possible ghost
sightings at a nearby cemetery to the lover's lane murders.

In 2001, police received a hand-written note demanding $100,000 for
information on the murders. The return address on the envelope was "Cheryl
Henry" and "Andy Atkinson."

Nothing has ever turned up.

Then, earlier this year, while re-entering DNA from old crimes into a new
indexing system, investigators discovered a match.

In June 1990, two months before Andy and Cheryl were murdered, an exotic
dancer left work one night and went home.

While she walked through her house, a man jumped out of a doorway "in
nightmare fashion," according to Miller. He pulled a gun, terrorized the
woman and raped her. But he left her alive.

And he left DNA. The same DNA he left on Cheryl two months later.

When they found the match this year, Houston police asked the woman if she
would meet with a sketch artist. She agreed.

Police are chasing several new leads from other exotic dancers who claim to
have been raped by the man in the sketch. They just learned last year that
Cheryl also worked at a strip club in Houston before her death.

Cheryl's family did not return an e-mail from The Fayetteville Observer to
comment for this story.

Miller said investigators are waiting for DNA results to return from a
backed-up state crime lab in Texas, hoping for more matches.

"It's a case that needs to be solved," Miller said.

Then, maybe, they can finally bury the man in the sketch.

The end

On Aug. 23, 1990, word spread like wild fists, punching people from Texas to
North Carolina.

Garland Atkinson, the father, got the first call.

Garland, they've found his car.

"It was like a horse kicked me in the stomach," Garland said.

Garland's sped to the site. His Camaro broke down halfway there, but he
flagged down a guy in a wrecker and rode the rest of the way.

He walked through the woods, looking at the ground, not wanting to find
anything. Then, he saw policemen pointing flashlights at something in the
distance. He ran toward them. Police tried to stop him.

"Bull," he told them. "It's my son that's missing."

Look, that's not your son. It's the girl.

They called off the search until morning because of heat and bugs.

Just after daybreak, they found Andy, tied to a tree Garland had passed
three times.

"Maybe I wasn't supposed to see him like that," he said.

Tim Godwin, the cousin, was a junior at Methodist College.

Tim, you need to come home.

He drove to his parents' house, saw a full driveway and heard people in the
garage.

There, he found his dad and a preacher. His dad talked first.

They found Andy.

"Where?"

Well, he was murdered last night.

Tim drove off five minutes later, not sure where he was going, just hoping
to escape the shock.

He still hasn't outrun it.

Ann Fowler, the mother, heard from her dad.

The conversation went exactly how she envisioned it would go 10 years
earlier.

Ann, something terrible has happened.

"Not with Andy."

Yes, it is. He's dead.

Houston, the city, would read about it on the front page of the paper the
next day.

The headline had all the ingredients to captivate them.

Couple slain in lover's lane mystery

For nearly 18 years, the cousin, the father, the mother and the city have
waited for the end.

But first, they had to see the sketch - the sketch of a man who may be a
little rounder, or balder, or alive, or dead, or still raping and killing.

The sketch of a man they hate, a man who has hung over them for nearly two
decades, a man who is the reason their sandy-haired boy with dimples never
got any older.”

The Fayetteville Observer - Fayetteville, NC
 
Last edited:
List of locations courtesy of @zwiebel from the discussion thread:

Gigi's: 11150 Nw Fwy, Houston 77092 - workplace of rape survivor.


Rick's Cabaret: 77057 Bering Dr, Houston 77057 - former workplace of Cheryl.


Gold's gym: 16211 Clay rd, Houston, 77084 - workplace of Andy.


Dreamstreet Club: number unknown, Winrock Blvrd, Houston, 77057 -workplace of Andy.


Bayou Mama's: corner near Westheiner rd and Gessner rd, Houston, 77064- (building now demolished). Nightclub Cheryl and Andy visited before their murder.


Murder location, nr 1300 block Enclave Parkway, Houston, 77077
cul de sac nr Gulf Freeway (Eldridge Prkway??) :

http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?sugex...a=X&ei=76nuUIHlF9DmtQaywIDoAw&ved=0CDAQ8gEwAA


Rape location, Terra Cotta Drive, Houston, 77040:

http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?sugex...&sa=X&ei=AKvuUJC6FoeYtQaP64A4&ved=0CDAQ8gEwAA
 
Last edited:
CAH Making a Difference

On January 22, 2011, America’s Most Wanted featured Citizens Against Homicide cold case

Cheryl Henry (age 22) and her boyfriend, Andy Atkinson (age 21) were brutally murdered on August 23, 1990. Their bodies were found in an undeveloped, wooded area of Western Harris County in Houston, Texas. Both victims had been tied with a rope and their throats slashed. Cheryl had also been raped.

Seventeen years later, DNA evidence found at the crime scene had been matched to DNA collected in the unsolved 1990 rape of a 30 year-old woman, also in the Houston area. Investigators were then able to release a composite sketch of the suspect after talking with the rape victim.

CAH Victim Advocate, Gene Cervantes, contacted America’s Most Wanted and relayed to them case factors of the Henry/Atkinson murder case.

CAH Making a Difference | Citizens Against Homicide
 
Links courtesy of @zwiebel:

August 28 1990. 'Ex NC man slain in Texas'
'Officials also found Atkinson's golf club with what appeared to be blood on it....150 yards away. Far enough away that they couldn't see what was happening to each other.'
http://news.google.com/newspapers?n...klOAAAAIBAJ&sjid=_BMEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6529,5274313

May 19, 2008. 'DNA may help break notorious Lover's Lane murders'
http://www.chron.com/news/houston-t...help-break-notorious-Lover-s-Lane-1635849.php

October 10th, 2010. 'Who is my sister.?'
http://www.prestoimages.com/site/rd3/3_page12622.pdf

December 11, 2010. 'Mysterious Lover's Lane Murderer still at large'
http://www.examiner.com/article/mysterious-lover-s-lane-killer-still-at-large

December 11, 2010. Radio interview with Andy's Dad.
Crime Wire Presents Two Cold Cases
 
“But about five years ago, the Harris County Sheriff s Department entered a DNA profile found at an unsolved burglary/rape that had actually been committed months BEFORE the killings of Cheryl and Andy.

The result: The DNA evidence from the two different crimes

seemed to be from the same person.

Even better? The previous rape victim saw her attacker and survived.

In her first-ever interview, this rape victim revealed the details of her attack to the KHOU 11 News I-Team.

It was probably 2:30am and I walked upstairs and this guy was up in my bedroom, said the victim. He was wearing a blue uniform of some type.

The woman, who had just returned home from her job at Gigi s nightclub, said her attacker was asking for her boyfriend and said he owed him money.

Meanwhile, her rapist put her hands behind her back and wrapped them with duct tape. He placed a bag over her head and put a gun to her throat.

He kept pulling the trigger. He cocked it. He d uncock it and then *advertiser censored* it, she said. He had a black fishnet thing over his head. He was probably six foot two, 200 pounds, olive complexion and black hair.

Eventually, the woman s attacker took $250 from her home and left.

The victim said she s always thought it could be connected to her moving company. She said one of her movers had recently threatened her life.

I think it had to do with this moving company I had an altercation with, she said.

That theory has never been proven by police.

However, there is one interesting fact that may just be an amazing coincidence: The rape victim says that she once worked for one of the murder victim s fathers, the dad of Andy Atkinson.”

https://www.khou.com/mobile/article/story/news/investigations/2014/07/23/12047944/
7/23/2014
 
Post from the discussion thread by @mocity on 8/23/16:

“Bumping for Cheryl and Andy. 26 years ago today my stepsister and her boyfriend were murdered and the person has never been caught. DNA from Chery's murder was matched to another rape around the same time and that girl saw him. There is a composite sketch yet the case is unsolved.

What's on my mind today? Cheryl. Cheryl. Cheryl. How I wish I could have been with you. The police wouldn't let me go yo you when they found you. I know I could have breathed life into you or died beside you. I'm so sorry, honey, they held me back and wouldn't let me go to you. I love you with all my heart. You are cherished. Thank you for being you. Loving, fun, such a precious daughter and sister and friend. Thank you Precious Jesus for welcoming my baby into your arms and holding her close to you. Thank you, Lord, for giving me the ability to smile again after losing Cheryl. I so wanted to be able to smile and laugh again and raise our other children in a happy home. God answered my prayer.”
 
Post by @mocity from the discussion thread:

“Re-posting the composite sketch that was done after the hit on the DNA from rape victim came back. They did the composite of what he looked like at the time and then age progressed it.”

composite-jpg.100151
 

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