Why Did a Computer Program Flag Ted Bundy as a Top Suspect and Then Filter Him Out?
True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews
Tony Brueski
4.2 • 612 Ratings
🗓️ 1 June 2026
⏱️ 18 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Bob Keppel was one of the King County detectives who could see the pattern forming in the spring of 1974. Same age range. Same appearance. Same young man on crutches or in a sling. The Seattle papers started using the word pattern. The Task Force opened a tip line. The phone did not stop ringing.
By summer, the Ted Task Force had a composite, a first name, and a car description from witnesses at Lake Sammamish, where the man calling himself Ted had taken two women from a crowded beach in a single afternoon. The tips eventually exceeded two hundred thousand names.
Three of those tips came from people who knew Ted Bundy personally. His girlfriend Elizabeth Kloepfer reportedly called. Crime writer Ann Rule, who worked a crisis line with him, reportedly called. A psychology professor reportedly called. The name Ted Bundy appeared on three separate cards inside the same file.
The Task Force ran a computer cross-reference at the University of Washington. Bundy made the top hundred suspects. He was ranked down — no criminal record, good apartment, law student. The picture in every detective's head of the man doing this did not match a clean-cut campaign volunteer.
The right name sat in a stack while women kept disappearing and families waited for phone calls that would not come for months. When the remains at Issaquah were found in September, the killings had already stopped — because Bundy had driven to Utah.
This is the first of five conversations on Ted Bundy: History's Hidden Killers. The investigative failure that let him stay hidden for an entire year, told through the names of the women whose lives were the cost.
Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/ Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/ Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspod X Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePod
This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.
#TedBundy #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #Seattle #1974 #LakeSammamish #LyndaHealy #ColdCase #SerialKiller #TrueCrimePodcast
Transcript
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | This is History's Hidden Killers. |
| 0:04.3 | Here now, Tony Brewski. |
| 0:08.2 | Karen Sparks, 18 years old. |
| 0:14.5 | She is asleep in her basement bedroom, |
| 0:17.0 | in a house on the University of Washington campus. |
| 0:19.7 | It is January 4th of 1974, and sometime, before dawn, |
| 0:27.0 | somebody comes in through a side door that wasn't locked, |
| 0:31.8 | pulls a metal rod off the frame of her own bed |
| 0:36.0 | and beats her with it while she sleeps. |
| 0:39.1 | And by the time her roommate finds her, she is unconscious. |
| 0:42.4 | And she is going to stay that way for 10 days. |
| 0:46.3 | When she wakes up, she has lost most of who she used to be. |
| 0:52.6 | Brain damage will live with her for the rest of her life. |
| 1:00.3 | Memories that don't come back. |
| 1:03.2 | The independence she had as an 18-year-old college student gone in a single night. |
| 1:10.3 | By the hand of a man whose face, she will never see. |
| 1:16.1 | Karen Spark survives. |
| 1:17.3 | She is the first one that we know about. |
| 1:22.9 | Her case goes into a stack on a Seattle desk. There's no suspect. There's no pattern yet. There is a girl who |
| 1:32.5 | almost died in her own bed and a city that has not yet learned to be afraid. Four weeks later, |
| 1:42.9 | the same city does it again. |
| 1:45.3 | Girl doesn't come down for breakfast. |
... |
Transcript will be available on the free plan in 25 days. Upgrade to see the full transcript now.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Tony Brueski, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of Tony Brueski and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.

