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Press Releases & Articles
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My
boss was the BTK killer
I was the next victim
By Mary Capps
with Jim Dobkins
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Press
Release
Announcing
a “surprise” book signing event at Watermark Books & Cafe
She
worked for the BTK serial killer
Now Mary
Capps is telling her side of the story in
My boss
was the BTK killer…I was the next victim
WICHITA, KS
June 30, 2007 – Sedgwick County resident and Wichita native Mary Capps will be
featured in a major book signing event Saturday, July 14th, 2 p.m. to
4 p.m., at Watermark Books and Café, 4701 E. Douglas in Wichita.
It is a “surprise” book signing
as her book, which Capps co-authored with veteran crime writer Jim Dobkins, was
written in virtual secrecy. Neither the public nor the media was aware of the
book’s existence until mid-June.
Formal publication date for the
book is July 10th; however, through advance arrangement with the
publisher, books are available for sale at Watermark Books & Café.
The Saturday event will end the
launch week for the Capps’ book – a week in which she is booked for 30 radio and
TV interviews, including an appearance on Nancy Grace’s segment of CNN’s
Headline News on Friday, July 13th.
Capps worked 6-and-1/2 years
under the supervision of Dennis Rader in the Compliance Department for the City
of Park City, Kansas.
Rader was her boss until his
arrest in February 2005 as the BTK (Bind Torture Kill) serial killer, confessing
ten brutal murders, over17 years, 1974 to 1991. The realization that he had
targeted her as his eleventh victim sent her into Post Traumatic Stress
Syndrome.
She reveals many things about
Dennis Rader not previously made public, including the time her aunt and another
Park City employee saved his life; how he terrorized her on the job; how he
might have been poisoning her; and documents why she believes she was Project
Broadwater – Dennis Rader’s intended eleventh murder victim.
Capps reveals why Park City
Management unfailingly sided with her serial killer supervisor instead of her
when she filed grievances about her boss’ erratic, intimidating behavior towards
her. She interweaves the despicable acts of BTK with events happening
simultaneously in her life; from little girl daydreams to tormenting nightmares.
Capps gives unique insight into
the man and monster before his exposure as BTK. Mary Capps began having horrible
nightmares and premonitions of impending danger during the final months she
worked under Rader's supervision. Those nightmares intensified when she realized
he had been planning to murder her. It was her own Nightmare on Elm Street --
she desperately needed sleep but was afraid to sleep because she knew what
awaited her.
It took many months for Mary
Capps to recover from the nightmares and Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome. She
believed that the only way for her side of the story to be fully told was to
write her own book.
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Press
Release
New Book Release: “My boss was
the BTK killer…I was the next victim”
Mary Capps survived Dennis Rader,
the BTK serial killer, and now she’s telling her side of the story
PHOENIX,
AZ July 2, 2007 – Mary Capps worked 6-and-1/2 years as a
Park City, Kansas Compliance Officer under the supervision of Dennis Rader,
later exposed as the notorious BTK (Bind Torture Kill) serial killer. The
mental agony of finding out the deep and dark secrets that had been so closely
guarded by her boss, plus learning that she was BTK’s intended 11th
murder victim, plunged her into deep depression and Post Traumatic Stress
Syndrome.
She went into hiding, rarely
venturing out into public places. But there was one thing she could not escape
-- the horrible nightmares. She experienced her own Nightmare on Elm Street –
nightly needing to sleep, wanting, to sleep, but afraid of going to sleep
because she knew what awaited her.
Capps reveals many things about
Dennis Rader not previously made public, including the time her aunt and another
Park City employee saved his life; how he terrorized her on the job; how he
might have been poisoning her; and documents why she believes she was Project
Broadwater – Dennis Rader’s intended eleventh murder victim.
She also reveals why Park City
Management unfailingly sided with her serial killer supervisor instead of her
when she filed grievances about her boss’ erratic, intimidating behavior towards
her. She interweaves the despicable acts of BTK with events happening
simultaneously in her life; from little girl daydreams to tormenting nightmares.
In her book, Capps provides
unique insight into the man and the monster before his exposure as BTK. She
talks about the physical symptoms she experienced many times during the
afternoons . . . after feeling fine when she went to work -- the leg cramps, the
sudden trouble breathing, the unexpected loss of memory -- all symptoms like
those caused by a certain illegal date rape drug.
Was her boss poisoning her?
Capps gives two plausible ways he could have done so. Was it a miracle when all
of the symptoms cleared up immediately after her last day of working with him?
Mary does not think so.
Dennis Rader hated to be called
“dogcatcher,” which is exactly why the publisher registered the domain name
www.btkdogcatcher.com for the book’s
Internet marketing web site. It might not be much, but it allows Mary Capps to
get in a little dig at her ex-boss, the man who confessed to ten murders over a
17-year span, 1974 to 1991.
Jim Dobkins co-authored this
book and other crime books.
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Valley
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Author says she
was next
By Josh Heck
Published: July
05, 2007 08:17:31 AM
There was nothing out of the ordinary about Mary Capps watering her jasmine
plant this week at her east Valley Center home. But it wasn’t until recently
that Capps’ life started getting back to normal.
Haunted by the thought that she was the next target of convicted serial killer
Dennis Rader, Capps’ life was turned upside down when Rader was arrested Feb.
25, 2005.
She battled post-traumatic stress syndrome, depression, anger and nightmares
after learning that her former boss was BTK.
In an effort to start living again, Capps revealed the events that led her to
believe her life was in danger in a book set to be released July 10. “My boss
was the BTK killer: I was the next victim” is being touted as the book that few
saw coming — including those in the media. The book has been sold on the
Internet since June.
The publication comes on the heels of the book recently released by the Wichita
Eagle, titled “Bind Torture Kill: The inside story of the serial killer next
door.”
Jim Dobkins, who has been working with Capps, said the only way for Capps to
tell her side of the story was for her to write her own book. Capps declined to
be extensively interviewed for the Wichita Eagle book, Dobkins said.
With the release of her book — which also gives some insight into Rader’s life
before he was known as BTK — Capps has an extensive interview schedule in the
coming weeks with various media across the country. A book signing has also been
scheduled from 2 until 4 p.m. July 14 at the Watermark Books & Café, located at
4701 E. Douglas in Wichita.
“There is a surprising amount of national interest in Mary’s story,” Dobkins
said.
But it wasn’t until recently that Capps was ready to tell her side of the story.
She sat down with The News July 2 to talk about some of what she went through in
Park City with Rader as her boss and why she believes she was targeted as a
murder victim.
Working with Rader
For years, Rader was the primary compliance officer in Park City, but that
changed in 1998 when Capps was hired by the city. Rader was then promoted into a
supervisor role.
From the beginning, Capps said their working relationship was strained.
“He hated me,” Capps said. “And I hated him.”
She said Rader always dispatched her to the animal control calls while he stayed
in the office. She said she thought part of the job was to be more visible in
the community and wondered why Rader often chose not to go out on calls.
Rader kept a number of items related to the murders in his office at city hall
in Park City.
While she was out working, Capps contends Rader was in a sense “scrap booking”
what he had done.
Capps contends all of her complaints and grievances about how Rader treated,
harassed and bullied her essentially fell on deaf ears, She said city officials
usually sided with Rader.
She wanted to quit, but needed the job, she said. She needed the insurance
coverage.
Looking back, Capps said she was glad she never figured Rader out.
She wondered who she would have told if she had and who would have believed her,
especially considering how she said her complaints against Rader were handled.
Capps often missed work for various reasons. Mostly, she said, because of Rader.
In 2001, Capps said she was visiting the doctor more frequently, complaining of
various symptoms. Her doctor documented everything she told him about what she
believed was happening to her.
Capps couldn’t explain why she said she would often experience leg cramps,
trouble breathing or unexpected loss of memory while at work.
She said all of the “mysterious” symptoms went away when Rader was arrested.
Capps had a doctor’s appointment that day. But she would have to cancel her
appointment.
She got a call that she needed to come to city hall as soon as she could that
day near the end of February 2005. When Capps arrived, she said she met with
Jack Whitson and then Mayor Emil Bergquist, who told her that the city was
complying with a federal investigation and she was being put on paid vacation
until further notice. Capps was told not to talk to anyone.
Still unsure of what was happening, Capps left city hall wondering if she had
done something wrong
Had Rader finally pushed someone too far? Capps said she thought.
The next day during a news conference when Wichita police announced BTK had been
arrested, “I broke down crying,” Capps said.
She said so much was going through her mind. Mostly, though, she said she was
angry.
Angry because she said people didn’t listen to her complaints. Angry because all
of the little things she said she encountered while working under Rader were
starting to add up.
Despite Capps’ contentions that city officials didn’t listen to what she said
about Rader, she said she was glad that she told someone about all of the things
that went on while she worked for the city.
She said others would recall things that Capps told them and start putting the
pieces together. During the month before Rader’s arrest, Capps said a number of
“crazy” things were going on.
Rader was changing, she said.
Broadwater
Capps said she believes at some point Rader intended to kill her. She said a lot
about Rader changed in the last year she worked with him that led her to believe
he was targeting her as a victim.
Capps said Rader did a reversal from when she first started working for Park
City. Rader started going back into the field and started making small talk with
her about her family. Before that, Capps said she would try to talk with Rader,
only to have him cut her off.
Capps contends he never stopped “trolling.”
In addition to Capps’ suspicions that she was a target, court records also
indicate Rader might have killed again.
During his 32-hour interrogation after his arrest, records show Rader revealed
plans for a Project Broadwater, or simply Broadwater.
“I tried to hit on her the day I dropped the Number Two at the UPS box,” court
documents show that Rader said. “It was a run, it was a go and everything, but
they were working on the roads. … You just do a back up and wait for another
day. I was going to try it in the spring or fall …”
Capps lived in a duplex off of Broadway near 57th Street at the end of a
cul-de-sac. A lagoon sits behind the
property.
Hence the name “Broadwater,” Capps said.
Recovery
Following Rader’s arrest, Capps went into hiding, rarely going anywhere, while
battling constant nightmares, her depression and post-traumatic stress. Capps
said she stayed away from people and public places as much as she could for 17
months.
Now, she is recovered.
She began working for her aunt and uncle and started getting out in public
again. She also started writing her book.
After a short time with her aunt and uncle, Capps started working with her
fiancé’s trucking company.
She said she may never forget what she went though for six and a half years
while working in Park City and the 17 months that followed Rader’s arrest.
Capps said she was happy with the way her book came out.
By sharing her firsthand experiences, Capps said she hopes people will be able
to stand up for being harassed in the workplace. She said she would also like to
see more stringent grievance procedures at the federal level.
“I hope my message is being delivered in the way I want it to be delivered,” she
said.
Rader pleaded guilty to killing 10 people, from 1974 to 1991.
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Press
Release
HUTCHINSON, KS July 27,
2007 – Sedgwick County resident
and Wichita native Mary Capps will be featured in a major book signing event
Friday, August 10th, 3 p.m. to 6 p.m., at Hastings Books Music &
Video Store, 416 East 30th Street in Hutchinson..
Capps co-authored My boss was the BTK killer…I was the
next victim with veteran crime writer Jim Dobkins. The book was written in
virtual secrecy. Neither the public nor the media was aware of the book’s
existence until just before the book’s official release in mid-July.
Books are available for sale at the Hastings store in
Hutchinson.
Capps worked 6-and-1/2 years under the supervision of
Dennis Rader in the Compliance Department for the City of Park City, Kansas.
Rader was her boss until his arrest in February 2005 as the
BTK (Bind Torture Kill) serial killer, confessing ten brutal murders, over17
years, 1974 to 1991. The realization that he had targeted her as his eleventh
victim sent her into Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome.
She reveals many things about Dennis Rader not previously
made public, including the time her aunt and another Park City employee saved
his life; how he terrorized her on the job; how he might have been poisoning
her; and documents why she believes she was Project Broadwater – Dennis Rader’s
intended eleventh murder victim.
Capps reveals why Park City Management unfailingly sided
with her serial killer supervisor instead of her when she filed grievances about
her boss’ erratic, intimidating behavior towards her. She interweaves the
despicable acts of BTK with events happening simultaneously in her life; from
little girl daydreams to tormenting nightmares.
Capps gives unique insight into the man and monster before
his exposure as BTK. Mary Capps began having horrible nightmares and
premonitions of impending danger during the final months she worked under
Rader's supervision. Those nightmares intensified when she realized he had been
planning to murder her. It was her own Nightmare on Elm Street -- she
desperately needed sleep but was afraid to sleep because she knew what awaited
her.
It took many months for
Mary Capps to recover from the nightmares and Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome.
She believed that the only way for her side of the story to be fully told was to
write her own book.
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