It was a televised debate between experts that dominated the 1999
murder trial of 38-year-old Thomas D. Huskey, accused killer of four
women. This was the first documented serial killer in Knox County,
Tennessee, and prosecutors were seeking the death penalty. The
two sides focused not only on the issue of his mental state at the
time of the offenses, but also used insect analysis to make an issue
of the time of death of two of the victims.
Prostitutes dubbed Huskey the "Zoo Man" because he once
had worked at the Knoxville Zoo and he liked to take women close to
it for sex. His father had been an elephant trainer, so he was
raised at the zoo, but eventually Huskey was fired for abusing the
animals.
The first victim was discovered on October 20, 1992. She had
been buried in a shallow grave in a remote wooded area in East Knox
County. Over the next few days, three more bodies of women
were found in the same area, all but one of them known prostitutes.
The police quickly linked them as the work of one person.
On October 21, Huskey was taken into custody for solicitation, and
in four separate and conflicting statements, he then confessed to
murder. He also said he had raped three of the four women,
although the autopsies did not yield any conclusive evidence on that
score.
While five mental health practitioners debated over whether Huskey
had multiple personality disorder (known today as dissociative
identity disorder, or DID), experts on insect activity in corpses
tried to establish when the victims had died.
Dr. Henry Goff offered testimony for the defense on forensic
entomology. That is, he studied the maggots on the decomposing
body of one victim, concluding from the age of the larval stages
that Huskey could not have killed her. He was in custody on
October 21st and Goff estimated that the earliest the victim could
have died was October 23rd. The theory that guided his
assessment is that certain insects are attracted to bodies soon
after death to deposit eggs. Estimating the age of the insects
from predictable stages of development offers a rough idea of the
time that has elapsed since death, also known as the minimal
postmortem interval (PMI).
Goff also did insect studies on another corpse to support the
idea that she could have been killed by another man---her own
boyfriend. The original time of death was estimated by the
state's expert as October 14th, but she was apparently seen on
October 17th with her suspected killer. In that case, the
state's expert could have been wrong in his conclusions.
With any time of death estimate, there is room for doubt, and the
prosecution forced Goff to admit that insect activity can be
affected by weather and environmental variables. However, Goff
pointed out that he and the state's expert relied on all the same
data to come up with their conflicting conclusions.
Nevertheless, the window of uncertainty can range from eight to
twenty-four hours—a time period that was obviously critical in the
Huskey case.
Given how inexact the entomological interpretation was, the defense
relied on the big guns of mental health. With the idea that
Huskey did in fact commit the murders, three experts examined the
defendant, and psychiatrist Robert L. Sadaff said, "It is clear
from reviewing the records and examining Thomas Huskey that it was
the alter ego Kyle who was responsible for the violent behavior,
including the rapes and murders." Kyle apparently
admitted to the killings and he (not Huskey) also made the
confessions to police. (The defense would later claim that
these confessions were manipulated.)
The prosecution charged that the personalities were faked, and in
fact were based on characters in a daytime soap opera, Days of Our
Lives. Another inmate contended that Huskey had read the
book, "Sybil," and had admitted he was going to use this
ruse in his trial. It was also true that the "facts"
about Huskey's sordid past on which the defense experts based their
diagnosis had not been substantiated. His alleged abusers were never
located and his own mother denied ever seeing manifestations of
other personalities. As a child, Huskey had exhibited an
active fantasy life, so his "recollections" of violence
were highly suspect.
After five days of deliberation over whether to find him Guilty But
Insane, the jury ended up saying that he suffered from a mental
illness but they were unable to make a decision about his degree of
responsibility. Thus, his 1999 trial resulted in a hung jury.
Nevertheless, it did bring some attention to forensic entomology,
and Knoxville is certainly the place to be for some of the best
information on the subject.
One of the reasons that time of death estimates leave so much room
for error is the fact that there has been little focused study of
the variables. Only one facility in the country makes this
their primary work: The Forensic Anthropology Center at the
University of Tennessee at Knoxville.
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