And in the hierarchy of human and inhuman transgressions, I find it difficult to relegate some pothead to the same plane as a rapist, robber, burglar, murderer, or pedophile.
Richard "Night Stalker" Ramirez
was all these things, and more.
What a difference a generation makes. The death of the man who was known as the Night Stalker hardly merited a comment even in local news; an incongruous take considering how much the news media at one time thrived on his predatory exploits (for the news media, too, has a saprophytic nature).
The relative lack of publicity over Ramirez's death is a source of ambivalence. I am happy for the families of his victims, as well as those who survived his acts, who needn't any additional reminders of horrors committed. Moreover, I certainly don't want to afford the man's legacy any additional publicity, especially as it turns my stomach that he actually received fan mail and marriage proposals in the aftermath of his terror, a phenomenon most recently mirrored with the
Boston Marathon bombers
.
But the fact remains that no one held Los Angeles County in greater terror during my 25-year career with the department than the Night Stalker. And that appraisal stands without dwelling on his excursions into other countries during a murderous spree that extended into Orange County and as far north as San Francisco.
No one who wasn't a cop in L.A. County during that unbearably hot summer of 1985 has any idea what it was like working patrol while the Night Stalker was committing his crimes. In the San Gabriel Valley, much of an early morning shift was spent chasing the radio from one prowler call to the next as people literally sweated the night away (I happened to be working the desk the night he shot and killed Dayle Okazaki and wounded her roommate in Temple Station's jurisdiction).