Oregon Girl's Kidnapper Was Suspect In Slaying -- Man Killed By Police Also Wanted In Molestation
SALEM - A man who barged into a home day-care center and kidnapped a 7-year-old girl is a suspect in a slaying that occurred two days earlier in a city park.
The silver gun pressed against Kristina Jacobson's head by Lance Sterling Alexander as police chased his stolen car 100 miles down Interstate 5 matches the description and caliber of the gun used in the killing, police said yesterday. Ballistics experts were testing the gun.
The girl escaped with only minor injuries Thursday after Alexander, 25, was shot to death by a police marksman in the freeway median near Rice Hill, midway between Eugene and Roseburg.
Police also said they had been seeking Alexander for questioning in the molestation of a young girl over the summer.
Kristina, who was not assaulted, said yesterday that Alexander told her he would keep her for "a couple of days. We're going out of state, then I'll let you go."
Police said they were investigating links between Alexander and the shooting death of William Jason Mowdy, 23, who was found dead Tuesday night in Bush Park near downtown Salem.
Besides the gun, police said Alexander's clothing was similar to clothing worn by the Bush Park gunman.
Kristina said she had never seen Alexander before he came to the door of the day-care center run by Chantiell Thomas. Her parents also said he was a stranger.
"We still don't know why he targeted that particular house," Salem Police Lt. Roger Vinyard said.
Vinyard said Salem Police had been trying to locate Alexander for questioning in the sexual abuse of a 4-year-old girl in June. Alexander was a casual acquaintance of the family.
Alexander had various minor run-ins with the law dating to 1985, when he was 14. Court records showed Alexander had a child in Stayton and had been ordered to pay child support.
"There were things like family disturbances, a couple of assaults, and two drug arrests," Vinyard said. "It was basically misdemeanor stuff."
One acquaintance, Michael Orona of Salem, said yesterday he never thought Alexander was capable of committing such a crime.
"From what I knew of him, he was a really nice guy," Orona said. "I could not believe this when I heard about it."
A medical examiner in Roseburg said it would be a week or two before toxicology reports would show whether drugs or alcohol were in the kidnapper's blood.