Mack is back
"There are a lot children out there that are alive only because of chance," Weston DeWalt says of serial killer Mack Ray Edwards, whose career as a child murderer with many unknown victims Weston has been piecing together for nearly three years.
Mack was an opportunistic killer able to control his impulse until the circumstances were all aligned to his advantage -- Weston believes he probably had his eyes on children spared by a lack of opportunity or happenstance.
He had a penchant for both young boys and young girls, but media accounts I've read of his six confessed crimes in 1970 -- including one in the Tribune -- referred to "unsuccessful" attempts at molesting victims. Interpret as you will.
Here's Sunday's story Searching for Tommy
By Kenneth Todd Ruiz, Staff Writer
10/14/2007
Fifty years after Tommy Bowman vanished from an Upper Arroyo Seco trail, Pasadena police have relabeled the case a homicide. Cold-case detectives believe Tommy was the victim of Mack Ray Edwards, as suggested earlier this year by local author Weston DeWalt and a team of investigators from other law-enforcement agencies.
But now, as DeWalt seeks to fill the gaps in Edwards' criminal biography, Pasadena's prime suspect falls under suspicion of unsolved crimes from Santa Barbara to Tijuana, prompting police to consider the unsettling possibility he might have murdered the most children in state history.
"Everybody needs to know about Mack Ray, who may be one of the most prolific child killers in history," said Pasadena police Detective John Dewar. "DeWalt's done a magnificent job, and I have to give him credit for everything we've been able to do up to this point. I'd hire him any day as a detective here."
Although Pasadena's new cold-case unit shares DeWalt's belief about where Tommy's body could be buried, the 63-year-old investigative journalist has added six more children he suspects Edwards killed.
Continued after the jump.

Much as the trailhead for Weston DeWalt's full-time pursuit of Mack Ray Edwards began, Tommy Bowman was the entry point for my coverage in the Pasadena Star-News and other