Pulling Back the Veil
of a Serial Killer Suspect:
An Analysis of the
Investigation, Arrest and Statements of Felix Vail
(An edited version of this post appears on Michelle McNamara's blog True Crime Diary.
Five decades before Louisiana became the setting for Nic Pizzolatto’s
True Detective, the bayou served as a
backdrop to serial killer suspect Felix Vail’s continual narrative of
domination, degradation and control. Much the same as Pizzolatto’s killer, Vail
operated in plain sight and was unknowingly aided by a peripheral
political connection; the late District Attorney Frank Salter Jr declined
to prosecute family friend Vail for the death of Mrs. Mary Horton Vail in 1962.
Vail strove to maintain his accustomed standard of living, one untethered to
obligations. His veiled dangerousness arose from the unabashed and
ruthlessly-pursued philosophy that life should be unaffected by the turmoil
caused by lesser people. This viewpoint contributed to Vail’s aspiration to
escape the commitment of becoming a second-time father, allegedly resulting in
the murder
of his wife, Mary Horton Vail.
While Pizzolatto’s killer purposefully baited authorities to
flaunt his self-assumed superiority, Vail, consummately self-aware, understood
that unveiling one’s innate supremacy requires a measure of practiced latency.
Vail’s adoption of a well-crafted, honed veneer assisted him in exploiting the unassuming
qualities of his counterparts in a mostly furtive and non-violent style. These
parasitic behavioral traits ensured that not all those that stood as obstacles
met an untimely demise. On his quest to master and command all things, Vail did
encounter resistance once his partner’s monetary resources were totally
consumed. His allegedly murderous response dictated that Vail’s nomadic
lifestyle, originally a byproduct of his evident shortcomings, would repeatedly
be a mixture of cowardice and calculated deceit.
*
My exposure to Vail began innocuously in October 2012
when Northeastern University’s Jack Levin connected me with investigative
reporter Jerry Mitchell in an effort to locate Jim Bell, a former Major Case
Specialist (MCS) with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). Bell investigated
Vail as a serial killer suspect briefly in 1993 before retiring from the
Violent Criminal Apprehension Program (ViCAP). Gregory M. Cooper, a member of the
Serial Homicide
Expertise and Information Sharing Collaborative, supervised Bell and
suggested contacting the FBI.
FBI MCS Wayne Koka liaised between Acting FBI Behavioral Analysis Unit-4 Unit Chief Armin Showalter, Jerry and myself. Coupling Jerry’s extensive Gone exposé with my knowledge of serial killers, they were
convinced of Vail’s potential. By January, Showalter
had spoken with Detective Randy Curtis of Calcasieu Parish Sheriff's
Office who summarily reopened the Mary Horton Vail
cold case. Koka later modestly labeled their assistance as “routine”, but
we understood it to be a vital intervention. After Vail’s arrest that May, I
dubbed it the ‘oldest
of a serial killer suspect in the nation's history’.
Since Jerry suspected Vail of the 1973 and 1984 disappearances
of his longtime girlfriend Sharon Hensley and another wife, Annette Craver
Vail, we continued to delve into his past. We consulted with Dr. Henry Lee
about DNA evidence, contacted Thomas A. DiBiase and the folks at
NamUs about other no-body murder prosecutions, reached
out to a jewelry expert to identify earrings
that Vail retained, and emailed the Internet Adult
Film Database to inquire about a triple X film in which Vail may have
participated.
During several visits to his residence, private
investigator Gina
Frenzel surreptitiously audio recorded Vail and photographed thousands of
pages from his journals. It is from the analysis of Vail’s utterances and the
content of his writings that the following vignette is offered. Since we are
not psychiatrists, this evaluation is based strictly on how Vail compares to previous
offenders in the Radford Serial Killer
Database. A trove of this magnitude of a serial killer suspect’s intimate
thoughts has never been available for examination. For that reason, it is
difficult to approximate exactly how Vail fits into the grander spectrum of
serial homicide offenders.
*
Vail, a detached observer, refers to himself primarily as
a scientist studying the anatomy of the ego; an entity whose mission is to
overtake our electrical life force, or spirit, which is labeled as the limiting
factor of the human species. Intending to triumph over the ego by subverting
and then neutralizing it, Vail hopes to reach a state of “free brain awareness”
where total autonomy, self-governance and spiritual enlightenment can be
attained. Suppression of the ego requires isolation, discipline and focus as
one must instruct the mind to overcome bodily functions like breathing and
hunger. Through periods of fasting, “elimination”, “simplification” and the “ceasing
of verbalization”, all toxins can be purged and unwanted aspects abandoned.
The undercurrent of eccentric flair that Vail exudes is
accented by his existential leanings and esoteric beliefs. A cerebral being,
Vail is handicapped by a preference for abstract thought, an immensely inflated
sense of self-worth and a tendency towards megalomania. Vail boasts a range of
abilities that have surpassed those of his peers from an early age, granted by
being privy to the brain’s remaining “ninety-percent”. Vail evidently places a
high degree of importance on intelligence, considering it a cherished attribute.
His desire to tap into the consciousness of strangers to access information
within their minds signifies Vail’s lifelong quest for absolute omniscience. To
anticipate underlying motives, Vail has conducted body language research and has
become a student of psychology; measuring and profiling in an effort to
determine when the truth is falsified. To Vail, the most detrimental event is
to be undermined.
The strangeness of the adult world, namely the undefined distinction
between what is thought and what is spoken, has confused Vail from a young age.
This dissonance manifested as a schism between intellect and emotion and an
inclination to understand the concept of dualism that has dominated his
existence and decisions. To Vail, it is upsetting that we are “in and out of
synchronicity” with ourselves. While discussing Waiting for the Galactic Bus and The Little Prince, two works that describe extraterrestrials’
observations of the human condition, Vail highlights his disdain for the
mainstream and reflects upon the parallels of his journey with those of the
characters in the stories.
Vail takes pride in thinking “outside the social
parameters” to which others are programmed. Ignoring “social ethics” and
“religious morality” affords Vail the ability to realize his ultimate potential.
Fitting into the social order is hampering, according to Vail, and requires
putting the mind “in neutral”. He cares not for what is deemed permissible by society
and openly disregards the illegality of prior actions. Although Vail relishes
his outsider status, he is keenly aware that perception is afforded more
attention than actuality. To avoid sending “red flags”, he pretends to be
influenced by the disapproval of others, thriving on the cons that he
perpetuates.
As humans are amalgams of environmental and situational
occurrences, some events have impacted Vail’s capacity to maintain enduring
relationships. Growing up on a farm with sharecroppers and orderlies instilled
in Vail a penchant for dehumanization and the opinion that some are subhuman. As
no woman could equal him emotionally, mentally, or spiritually, they existed
merely to be used. The search for a “mother substitute” for his son during their
travels was based specifically on what she could provide. Vail admits to a
sexual addiction and claims to have slept with “hundreds and hundreds” of women.
In reminiscing about trading “electrical energy” with his mother during
nursing, Vail demonstrates that his view of normal sexual relations was warped
from childhood.
While awaiting his trial, Vail is undoubtedly
contemplating the paradoxical nature of recent happenings. The image of a
supreme being yearning for complexity has now been forcibly juxtaposed with the
fallible man undone by weakness. Frenzel presented Vail with an opportunity for
connection using distrust abatement and defense reduction – tactics Vail once
employed for similar ends. As a consequence of his presumption that no one else
could possess these nefarious capabilities, the
all-seeing Vail failed to recognize Frenzel’s ruse. Although this deception seemingly
validates Vail’s long-held paranoid thought patterns, being exposed as
invariably human is, to Vail, a far more debilitating fate than any achieved at
trial.
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