SHIRLEY & RUSSELL DERMOND: 87 & 88 year olds murdered in Putnam Co, GA - May 2014

Missing wife of decapitated Georgia man found dead in lake​


elderly man decapitated wife missing savidge lake oconee mg orig _00000803.jpg
May 17, 2014
With the discovery of the body of an 87-year-old Georgia woman whose disappearance came to light after her husband’s decapitated body was found in their waterfront home, authorities not only want to know who did it, but also why.
Shirley Dermond’s body was found in Lake Oconee, south of Athens, Putnam County Sheriff Howard Sills told reporters Friday.
“We now, unfortunately, know that Shirley Dermond was murdered,” Sills said.
Sills declined to discuss the condition of the body other than to say, “the head was not removed or anything like that.”

The discovery adds an element to the investigation – the possibility that a boat was a mode of transportation in the killing, Sills said.

“We haven’t even had a funeral for Russell because their kids wanted to wait. Now that we know about Shirley, we will start planning the funeral services for both.”

From the beginning, investigators treated Dermond’s disappearance as an abduction. Her purse, cell phone and car were all at the couple’s million-dollar waterfront home on Lake Oconee where her husband’s headless body was found.

Investigators believe she was taken from her home after her husband, 88-year-old Russell Dermond, was decapitated sometime between May 2 and May 4.

Investigators continue to search for his head, and they plan to look in the same area of the lake where Dermond’s body was found, Sill said.

“Obviously, the head of Mr. Dermond will be quite difficult to locate.”

Russell Dermond’s body was discovered in the couple’s garage after friends, who hadn’t heard from the couple in days, went to their home.

The FBI put up more than 100 billboards in its search for the missing woman, and it offered a reward of up to $20,000 for information to her location or the arrest of the person responsible for her disappearance.

“The mindset of the individual that did this was a homicidal individual that doesn’t deserve to breathe the air on this Earth,” Sills said.

In the days after Dermond’s disappearance, authorities searched Lake Oconee in the vicinity of the couple’s home – turning up only a lawn chair and a Christmas tree – and sent cadaver dogs into the nearby woods, to no avail. Authorities have also spoken to neighbors, family and friends.

So far, the investigation has turned up little to shed light on the crimes. Investigators aren’t aware of any enemies the couple had made, or any reason someone would target them, Sills said.

 
....... On Carolyn Drive, a mile and a half into the subdivision, Sheriff Sills stopped at a cream stucco four-bedroom house. Two American flags were tacked to the mailbox. The front yard was trimmed in crape myrtles, boxwoods, and pine straw. In the driveway was that day’s edition of USA Today. The previous day’s as well. There, in a shaded cul-de-sac that backs up to the water, was the neighbor who had discovered the death. It had been days since he’d seen or heard from the elderly couple who lived in the house. The neighbor had phoned them several times. Nothing. So he’d gone over to check. The door was unlocked.

There had been some confusion after he called for help. Bodies were not all over. There was just one.

Sills stepped out of the Suburban and stuck a Glock 18C in his waistband. He went in the house through the kitchen door, the same door the neighbor entered. Then he headed for an open door that led to a cramped two-car garage. The garage was dimly lit, but the white walls helped Sills see. On the floor between a Lincoln Town Car and a Lexus SUV was a man’s body on its back. The man’s age was hard to guess—because the body had no head. It had been cut off. And it was gone.

Sills and two deputies swept the rest of the 3,200-square-foot home. The north-facing windows afforded a spectacular view of the lake. The wooded backyard sloped down toward a covered dock.

Sills assumed right away, and correctly, that the dead man was the homeowner. But there was another problem: The victim’s wife of 68 years was nowhere to be found.

Sills was struck by the pristine condition of the house. A horror scene it was not. Aside from the headless body in the garage, and save for an unmade bed and an off-kilter lampshade in the living room, it was showroom-perfect. The lampshade caught Sills’s eye only because everything else was so neat. What blood there was—a considerable amount—had pooled and dried near the body.

The best Sills could remember, there hadn’t been a double homicide in Putnam County since May 1984, 30 years earlier. It involved the rape and murder of an elementary and high school classmate of Sills’s.

.............
Russell J. and Shirley Wilcox Dermond were New Jersey natives. He was 88. She was a year younger.

For most of the 1990s, they lived in a neighborhood along the Chattahoochee River, on the south side of the Cherokee Town & Country Club below Roswell. Before moving to Georgia from the New York area in the late 1980s, Russ Dermond had been an executive for the company that makes Westclox and Seth Thomas clocks. But he didn’t exactly come here to retire; not long after arriving, he acquired a chain of metro-area Hardee’s restaurants. The establishments provided Keith and Bradley, two of the couple’s four children, with jobs in the food service industry.

Real retirement didn’t come until the late 1990s, when Dermond and his wife built their $1 million place on the shores of Lake Oconee. Golf at the Great Waters subdivision was one of the attractions for Russ, who had once played in tournaments at Roswell’s Horseshoe Bend course with Bradley.

Most of this Sills learned in the hours after Dermond’s body was identified. He also learned that the couple’s oldest son, Mark, had occasionally stolen from his parents, and that on his 47th birthday in the summer of 2000, Mark was shot and killed in his car during an Atlanta crack cocaine buy that went sideways. His killer remains in prison.

Russ Dermond was a reader, a walker. Someone reported seeing him strolling the golf course near his house on Friday, May 2, four days before his body was discovered. It may have been the last time anyone but his wife and his killer saw him alive.

He and Shirley had RSVP’d that they’d be at a neighbor’s Kentucky Derby party on Saturday. They never showed. Shirley, who played bridge and was a crossword whiz, had worked a puzzle in that Friday’s USA Today. It was still on the kitchen table. The couple’s Saturday mail was in the mailbox out front.


Sills in the Putnam County Sheriff's OfficeSills in the Putnam County Sheriff’s Office

He said Russ Dermond’s head was still missing.

What he did not divulge was that the cut was remarkably clean. “It was not the skill of a surgeon,” he would say months later, but “whoever did it took time doing it.” It was as if the collar of Russ Dermond’s T-shirt had been used as a guide for a very sharp knife, the likes of which had not turned up. After an autopsy revealed no fatal wounds on his body, the cause of death was, by the process of elimination, declared an as-yet-unknown head wound. Dermond’s decapitation appeared to be postmortem.

Another detail Sills kept under wraps during those first weeks was that authorities thought Russ Dermond had been tortured. The tip of one of his index fingers was smooshed, as if in a vise. But in helping identify her father by phone, Leslie Patton told Sills the flattened finger was a World War II injury.

Sills told reporters he prayed Shirley Dermond was still alive, that if abducted she’d be found. He said the couple had no known enemies, that there was nothing to indicate whether the killer came by road or lake.

“Could it have come from the water? Yes. Could it have come from the street? Yes. Could it come from outer space? Yes. It’s totally unknown,” Sills said. “This is quite candidly the most frustrating [case] that I’ve ever worked.”

He said locals were not panicked, but “I don’t care if it’s Buckhead or Bangladesh; you have a crime like this in a neighborhood, people are gonna be upset.”

Someone asked if investigators had any leads.

“If I had a good, solid lead, guess what? I wouldn’t be standing talking to y’all.”

Did the Dermonds know their attacker?

“It’s indicative of that,” Sills said. But someone could easily have knocked on their door, waited for it to open, and barged in.

Were relatives under suspicion?

“Nothing to indicate at all that their children are involved . . . And I never say never, but there’s certainly nothing that leads us to believe that they are . . . Everybody’s a suspect except me . . . I’ve looked at the background of the mailman.”

More than one killer?

Possibly, Sills said, but impossible to be sure. All avenues were being explored.

As the back-and-forth wound down, a reporter asked, “With the amount of evidence that you’ve collected so far, would you consider this a professional job?”

“A professional what job?” Sills said.

“There doesn’t appear to be a lot of evidence for it to be an amateur,” the reporter said.

“Is it a professional robbery?” Sills said. “Nothing seems to be gone. Is it a professional burglary? Nothing seems to be gone . . . Uh, I don’t know any professional decapitators.”

The reporter tried again. “There are professional hitmen.”

“The totality of this,” Sills said, “is just very different.”

Cue the kooks, the great unhelpful, the psychics and busybodies who can’t resist injecting their cluelessness into the fray when tragic intrigue, no matter how remote the locale, achieves escape velocity via satellite truck.

“My community is going hog-wild with rumors,” Sills said later. “We are inundated with unnecessary foolishness.”

Everyone had a theory about what had become of the Dermonds. They were in witness protection (they were not), their cover was blown, and someone they’d crossed caught up with them. Or, more fantastical, a mother gator protecting her young attacked Russ in his garage then dragged Shirley away.

Some heard about the 2000 murder of the Dermonds’ son and assumed the attack on them must be connected. Investigators looked into that first thing. It was a dead end.

One evening in mid-May last year, Putnam dispatchers received a call from a man who lived along Bluegill Road at the bottom end of the county near Lake Sinclair. He was convinced he might have information that could be of import in the Dermond case. Dispatchers passed him along to Sills, who answered as he usually does, “Howard Sills.”
In the minutes after Russ Dermond’s body was found, Sills sent a deputy to fetch security-camera surveillance footage from a guard shack at the entrance to the neighborhood. The deputy came back with bad news. About a month earlier, a storm had knocked out power, and the security camera, unknown to anyone, had stopped recording. Sills cursed his luck.

He and his investigators set out canvassing the neighborhood.

One of the couple’s nearest neighbors, next to a vacant lakefront lot that has belonged to R.E.M. bassist Mike Mills since the 1990s, was out of the country in Turkey. Her house sitter hadn’t seen anything unusual. Nor had residents in another cul-de-sac across the cove.

Sills called a meeting at the Great Waters clubhouse. The place was finally on the rebound after the recession. A sign outside promised “Endless Crab Legs.”

The gathering, though it gave investigators a chance to scope the locals, wasn’t much help.

Sills was worried. He needed something to chase, someone to catch.

Someone to send away—forever.

Of the three or four dozen murders Sills has investigated, all but six resulted in guilty pleas. Five killers have gone to death row.
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8 Years Later
Could new technology help crack cold case of who killed the Dermonds?





Channel 2′s Karyn Greer has learned that new technology could help crack the case as she revisited the crime scene with Putnam County Sheriff Howard Sills who is determined to solve it.

“We have done some geotracking, and we’ve gotten back that information the FBI fitted into their software program. And there’s a box I have in my office that people that were in the area at the time. I’m not saying that they were at the Dermond house, and we are presently working on that,” Sills said. “There was some intent to come back, I believe. And the reason for that is the towels to keep the blood from coming out. However, it had been three days before we knew about it.”

The sheriff said if the people who committed to help with the reward fund are still on board, $45,000 is being offered for an arrest and conviction in this case to bring the killer or killers to justice .


video at link
 

Author: Gabriella Nunez
Published: 8:31 PM EDT May 6, 2022
Updated: 11:08 PM EDT May 7, 2022

EATONTON, Ga. — A cold case is warming up as the Putnam County Sheriff's Office said there is new evidence in their search for who murdered an elderly couple, then dumped one of their body's into a rural Georgia lake.

It's been eight years since homicide detectives were called to investigate the murder of Russell and Shirley Dermond. Russell, 88, was found decapitated inside of his garage on May 6, 2014. His head was never found.

<snip>

On Friday, Sills said he recently received long-awaited cell phone data. Federal Bureau of Investigation agents are assisting by analyzing the new evidence, the sheriff said.

"The technology we are using was not in existence back in 2014," Sills said in a statement. "I don't want to create the impression that I have acquired some silver bullet, but this is yet another tool we are using to find out who perpetrated these heinous crimes."

Sills did not offer other details about the cell phone data, or if it belonged to anyone from the small, rural community where the couple was found dead.
 

Author: Ashlyn Webb (WMAZ)
Published: 7:53 PM EDT May 24, 2023
Updated: 7:53 PM EDT May 24, 2023

PUTNAM COUNTY, Ga. — Cutting-edge technology is helping law enforcement crack cases that went unsolved for decades.

<snip>
Now, investigators hope the same lab can warm up another Central Georgia cold case.

It's been nine years since someone brutally murdered Russell and Shirley Dermond in their Putnam County home.

Sheriff Howard Sills confirmed to 13WMAZ Wednesday that Othram Inc. is looking at evidence in the Dermonds' murders.

Sills told 13WMAZ he learned about Othram last year and flew out to Texas last fall to deliver evidence in the Dermonds case. He delivered more in March.

Now, he and investigators have even more of reason to be optimistic.

"They have developed an amount of DNA," Sills said.

Sheriff Howard Sills says they got a "DNA hit" off the evidence.

"Now, this could be this could very well be the Dermonds' DNA or some officer possibly even left his DNA," Sills said.


He says to ultimately determined that, Othram Inc. will have to do more testing.
 
New evidence discovered in recent days in the mysterious, still-unsolved slayings of Russell and Shirley Dermond, a Lake Oconee husband and wife whose gruesome killings shocked the region a decade ago, has injected a long-awaited jolt of energy into the hunt for a suspect.
Tuesday, the sheriff in Putnam County, where the deaths happened in early May 2014, received word that DNA trace evidence had been found by a forensics laboratory in Utah.
Sheriff Howard Sills, in February, hand-delivered several items of potential evidence to the lab. At least one of those items, a piece of clothing belonging to Russell Dermond, who was decapitated, was found to contain DNA from an unknown individual.
Sills told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that the discovery involved so-called “touch DNA” that could have been left by an assailant. “I don’t know that criminals at the time would have been concerned with touch DNA,” he said. The technique can detect miniscule samples of skin cells left on an item that has been casually touched.


Son says he has ‘sliver of hope’ after best evidence in 10 years revealed in Lake Oconee killing​



 
New evidence discovered in recent days in the mysterious, still-unsolved slayings of Russell and Shirley Dermond, a Lake Oconee husband and wife whose gruesome killings shocked the region a decade ago, has injected a long-awaited jolt of energy into the hunt for a suspect.
Tuesday, the sheriff in Putnam County, where the deaths happened in early May 2014, received word that DNA trace evidence had been found by a forensics laboratory in Utah.
Sheriff Howard Sills, in February, hand-delivered several items of potential evidence to the lab. At least one of those items, a piece of clothing belonging to Russell Dermond, who was decapitated, was found to contain DNA from an unknown individual.
Sills told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that the discovery involved so-called “touch DNA” that could have been left by an assailant. “I don’t know that criminals at the time would have been concerned with touch DNA,” he said. The technique can detect miniscule samples of skin cells left on an item that has been casually touched.


Son says he has ‘sliver of hope’ after best evidence in 10 years revealed in Lake Oconee killing​



I'll give this a hmmm for now... Good news and it should lead to someone having to explain how their even touch DNA got there if an unknown person. If not an unknown when it is determined or if connected to the real perp, like a murder for hire/friend then they are getting somewhere it seems. I doubt this would be put out unless they had more or want to spur worry in someone. Jmo.

At least with much of nothing over years it gives the son/family/friends some hope...
 
brand-new evidence discovered by two separate labs -- one in Utah and one in Texas -- is offering hope in solving this case.

Channel 2′s Karyn Greer was able to visit the lab in Texas last summer and got a lot at the technology they are using has helped solve thousands of cold cases worldwide including several here in Georgia.

“Traditional forensic testing looks at 20 markers, and then you upload those 20 markers to the CODIS database, which is the FBI database of known perpetrators in the United States. Unfortunately, when you’re working on cases involving victims that are unknown, you can’t do that because the victims are not a known perpetrator. So they’re not going to be in that database,” said Kristen Mittelman, development officer for Othram Labs.

The markers, however, could be in a genealogical database, Instead of 20 markers like the current technology, Othram is able to get hundreds of thousands of markers to build a DNA profile.

“Most of our cases are solving between fourth and sixth cousins, and some even beyond. And so that is what you need in order to be able to figure out where someone belongs,” Mittelman said.

Othram has solved 13 cold cases in Georgia. According to Project Cold Case, there are just over 12,500 cold cases statewide.

“Hundreds of cases, every day. Contests that have been stagnant, a DNA dead end for decades. And no hope. And now there’s hope,” Mittelman said.

Othram is one of two labs looking at the Dermond case. The sheriff has asked them to look at more evidence in this case. If they can find that, the sheriff is hoping to be able to give the Dermond family some closure.


 

New reward offered in unsolved killing of elderly couple​

This week marks the 10th anniversary of the grisly, unsolved killings

In the wake of last week’s revelation of new DNA evidence in the unsolved slayings of Shirley and Russell Dermond at Georgia’s Lake Oconee, the reward has increased for information that leads to an arrest in the decade-old case.

Putnam County Sheriff Howard Sills on Monday said that late last week the FBI informed him the agency would be adding $20,000 to the case’s reward fund. Combined with the FBI’s offering, that fund now totals about $25,000.

The sheriff hopes the reward, which could possibly double if other donors come through, will spur tipsters.
“Here’s $25,000,” Sills said, addressing potential informants. “And there’s a possibility there’s another $30,000. And if you want to collect this, now’s the time to give us a call. Because if our DNA research pans out, we won’t need your call.”

 

10 Years Later​

‘It eats at you.’ Inside the hunt for clues in decade-cold Dermond killings​

The unsolved slayings of Shirley and Russell Dermond at Lake Oconee continue to confound.

EATONTON — The cramped office is a cold-case cliche, littered with stacks of files andpapers. At a desk amid the clutter sits a balding, bespectacled sheriff. He spends his workdays entombed by 10 years of fruitless toil.
These boxes of notes, reports and photographs are all the Putnam County lawman has to show for a decade of investigating a high-profile double homicide, a case that has stumped him like none in his illustrious past.
The sheriff, Howard R. Sills, knows that clues to the identity of a perpetrator in the slayings of Shirley and Russell Dermond might lie buried in the materials surrounding him. He can’t shake a gnawing guilt that he’s missed something.
“It bothers me a great deal,” he says. “I know of hundreds of other cases that are not solved. But they’re not mine. It’s so damn frustrating.”

The gruesome, mystifying nature of their killings has generated broad public interest. A slew of true-crime television shows and podcasts have featured the case. Sills, an orator and natural showman, has welcomed most of them. He has entertained their producers and their questions. Anything to conjure a tip.

Most days, though, his only audience consists of the piles of Dermond documents, including a near avalanche in a corner of his office.

The Dermonds’ friends who’d called 911 had gone to see about them that Tuesday morning after the Dermonds failed to show up at a Kentucky Derby viewing party the Saturday prior.

Sills was in his office when the alert came in, but in seconds he was out the door, speeding the 14 miles to Great Waters in his black Suburban. He almost beat the first patrolman there.

He had been the sheriff of his home county since 1996. There hadn’t been a double murder there since 1984. When he arrived at the Dermond place, the neighbors who’d called for help were in the driveway, distraught.

Inside, Russell Dermond, 88, was dead on the floor of his carport between a small Lexus SUV and a Lincoln Town Car. He had been decapitated. His wife of 68 years, Shirley, 87, was nowhere to be found.

There appeared to be no motive. There were no signs of robbery or burglary. Nothing in the house looked out of place aside from an end table lamp and a few towels removed from a bathroom.

Ten days would pass before a pair of fishermen found Shirley Dermond’s corpse in the lake, 5 miles from her house by boat. Her head was bashed open with a hammer-like implement, her ankles bound with a cord to a pair of concrete blocks.

As sheriff, Sills, 68, is also his department’s chief investigator.

He has a reputation as a bloodhound and a bulldog. He resembles the latter, stout and blunt, a history professor with a badge. His whitecap of a mustache crests over a mouth that can spout case law and the Old Testament in a learned drawl that somehow rings clear. Or as his voice might put it, “klee-uhh,” with perfect over-enunciation.

in February, he had hand-delivered a trove of Dermond case evidence to a forensics laboratory in Utah for DNA testing. The lab can detect sub-microscopic wisps of genetic code left when someone casually touches an object.

“My Hail Mary pass,” Sills calls it. “It’s so far down the field, I can’t tell if the guy caught it.”

.....

 
The author of the above fancies self a literary genius or wannabe author. This is about a double murder not some novel about a sheriff and words to evoke some thoughts of the bulldog he is with his whatever mustache and so on and piles of papers in his office where he works from dawn til midnight. I'm sorry but just seems a bit purposely colorful and complimentary to the sheriff rather than fact driven.

In my opinion, look at who profited or stood to profit. Could be wrong but I highly doubt these 80 somethings were killed by some stranger they ticked off who wanted nothing from them.
 

FBI says whoever killed elderly Putnam County couple a decade ago should be ‘nervous’​


there’s a new FBI reward in the case.


But in a one-on-one interview with FBI Special Agent Andy Smith, who has been involved with the Dermond double murder for nine years, told Winne that there are new leads not just on the DNA front, but concerning cellphones too.

“Between the DNA and the cell phone leads, is there somebody out there or a group of people who ought to be nervous now?” Winne asked Smith.

“Yes,” Smith said. “I am very optimistic, and I share Sheriff (Howard) Sills’ optimism that we’re going to bring this case to a resolution also. We never stop. We will solve this case.”

“The FBI remained engaged in the investigation the entire past decade?” Winne asked Smith.

“Fulltime. Completely engaged with the Putnam County Sheriff’s Office and their investigative team since the beginning,” Smith said.

 
The author of the above fancies self a literary genius or wannabe author. This is about a double murder not some novel about a sheriff and words to evoke some thoughts of the bulldog he is with his whatever mustache and so on and piles of papers in his office where he works from dawn til midnight. I'm sorry but just seems a bit purposely colorful and complimentary to the sheriff rather than fact driven.

In my opinion, look at who profited or stood to profit. Could be wrong but I highly doubt these 80 somethings were killed by some stranger they ticked off who wanted nothing from them.
So I finally made it in here and don't have time to look back at the case but saw one of my last ones which I am replying to here. All I know is I come to most things for a reason even if I can't recall sometimes all the reason/s. And I trust that. And so it looks like, and it did start ringing some bells when I knew it was not a new case. In fact this is 10 years old.

And so it is personal or that's where I was at with it and money driven.
 

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