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When Kim Mager sat across from Shawn Grate, she was expecting to interact with another sex offender, one of many from her decades-long career.
Mager, a 30-year veteran of the Ashland City Police Department in Ohio, had no idea she was face-to-face with a serial killer. She interrogated him for 33 hours over eight days.
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“When I first started speaking to him, I didn’t find his personality to be that far off from other sex offenders, and I’ve interviewed many sex offenders,” the retired detective told Fox News Digital. “So, he was unremarkable to me. A lot of things he would say flowed like a typical conversation. His thought process seemed to be the same as anyone else.
OHIO MOTHER BURNED ALIVE BY EX-BOYFRIEND TESTIFIED AT HER OWN MURDER TRIAL, DOC REVEALS: ‘PURE EVIL’
Shawn Grate addressing the court before his sentencing.(Jason J. Molyet/News Journal via Imagn)
“But there was a difference,” she added. “That all changed when he spoke of his desire, his hunger. Those were his words — ‘a hunger to kill.’”
Mager collaborated with author Lisa Pulitzer to write “A Hunger to Kill: A Serial Killer, a Determined Detective, and a Quest for a Confession That Changed a Small Town Forever.” It details how Mager closed in on — and broke — one of Ohio’s most infamous serial killers.
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“I’ve been asked at least 30 times to speak out about the case, and I’ve declined every single time,” said Mager. “But then, I was approached by a family member of one of the victims. That family member came up to me in tears, saying the victim was being portrayed so negatively by some podcasts. This family member was very upset. She said, ‘Please do something.’”
Ashland Police Department Det. Kim Mager testifies during the trial of Shawn Grate in 2018 in Ashland County Common Pleas Court.(Tom E. Puskar/USA Today Network/Imagn)
“I knew I had to share this story — the right story,” said Mager. “And it’s important to let people know that what these victims experienced, this could happen to them. … It could have been me.”
On Sept. 13, 2016, Mager was in the shower when her phone started ringing. It was her captain. Emergency dispatchers had received a 911 call from a woman who claimed she was kidnapped by Grate.
Mager rushed to the station to interview the woman. By then, Grate had been tracked down by investigators. He was arrested and charged.
Kim Mager’s memoir, “A Hunger to Kill,” is available in bookstores now.(St. Martins Press)
According to Mager’s book, Jane Doe had bruises all over her face, arms and legs. There were fresh scratches and others that had healed. Some injuries were bluish-purple, others swollen and red. Splashes of maroon took over her neck and upper torso. Her eyes were bloodshot, and her face was stained with tears.
The jury recommended the death penalty for Shawn Grate. The judge agreed.(Brian J. Smith/USA Today Network/Imagn)
“I felt the weight of what had happened to her,” Mager said. “It’s hard for victims to talk about what happened to them — harder than anyone could imagine. It’s something even more difficult than speaking with a suspect. But I needed to get everything I could to get him.”
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As an experienced specialist in sex offenses, Mager was one of the officers assigned to Grate’s case.
Interviewing Jane Doe proved to be an emotional experience for Kim Mager. She was determined to get justice.(Jason J. Molyet/USA Today Network/Imagn)
“I didn’t recognize his name at all,” Mager admitted. “We were unfamiliar with him.”
Grate was known as a charmer and a drifter who was friendly to anyone he encountered. But that “nice guy” façade quickly faded in the interrogation room.
“My first impression was that he looked physically fit,” Mager explained. “He was muscular. Before you even made eye contact with him, the first thing you noticed was his physique. He also looked like he hadn’t showered.”
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Shawn Grate, a drifter, was described as “a nice guy” and a “charmer.”(Tom E. Puska/USA Today Network/Imagn)
“When we finally made eye contact, you instantly notice his blue eyes — these piercing blue eyes,” she said.
Like a real-life Clarice Starling from “The Silence of the Lambs,” she would sit alone in the interview room with the accused predator.
Mager soon learned there were other victims.
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The last home of Shawn Grate at 132 W. Second St. is filled with woodworking tools, cigarette butts, stuffed animals and other personal effects.(Jason J. Molyet/USA Today Network/Imagn)
“He’s opportunistic,” she explained. “If an opportunity is there, he seizes it. … Looking at these victims, you might see two who look similar, and then you see someone who’s completely different.
“You have one who’s leading a life of faith, who has more faith in God than almost anyone I know,” she continued. “Someone who would never have a man’s phone number on her phone because she’s so sound in her beliefs. And then you had another who sold her body at times. These women all had different lifestyles. There is no one victim type other than the opportunity that was there, whether it came to him or he created that opportunity.”
Following Grate’s arrest, police discovered the remains of Stacey Stanley, 43, and Elizabeth Griffith, 29, in the vacant Ashland home where Grate had been living. Grate confessed to the murders.
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A bench in memory of Stacey Stanley and Elizabeth Griffith, victims of serial killer Shawn Grate, has been placed near the playground at New London’s Recreation Park. (Tom E. Puskar/USA Today Network/Imagn)
Stanley was described as someone who was down on her luck, Oxygen.com reported. According to the outlet, Grate made it seem like he was going to help her with a flat tire before he abducted and assaulted her.
Griffith was said to be struggling with her mental health and had gone missing.
According to the outlet, Grate confessed to the murder of 29-year-old Candice Cunningham, a woman he dated. He took authorities to a wooden area about 12 miles from Ashland where he dumped her body. He also confessed to killing 31-year-old Rebekah Leicy, who had issues with drugs. She was reported missing in February 2015.
Robert Leicy and Cindy Tilton look at photos of his daughter Rebekah Leicy. Serial killer Shawn Grate pleaded guilty to Rebekah’s murder.(Jason J. Molyet/News Journal/Imagn)
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The outlet noted Grate also admitted to killing 23-year-old Dana Lowrey, who had disappeared in 2005. Her remains were found in 2007, less than a mile from Grate’s home. She was selling magazines at the time. According to reports, it is believed that Lowrey was Grate’s first victim.
Lisa Zener said Shawn Grate approached her daughter weeks before two bodies were discovered.(Brian J. Smith-USA Today Network)
Doe said she met Grate in the summer of 2016. They would talk about the Bible, go on long walks and play tennis, the Mansfield News Journal reported. While Grate hinted he wanted more than a friendship, Doe said she turned him down and explained she didn’t believe in premarital sex due to her beliefs. Grate told her he respected her decision.
It was a lie.
Grate held Doe captive and sexually assaulted her “in every way imaginable.” While he was asleep, Doe managed to escape and call police.
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Grate told Mager he wanted to know what drove him to kill.
Dana Nicole Lowrey’s skeletal remains were found in 2007. She vanished in 2005.(Sarah Volpenhein/Marion Star/Imagn)
“He was asking why he did it because he didn’t know,” Mager explained. “As we explored his childhood, he would come up with all of these different things that happened in his life but couldn’t definitively say any of those things caused it. … He asked me over and over, ‘Why did I do this? Why do you think I did this?’
“He talked a lot about … his relationships with his family,” Mager continued. “He talked about what he claimed was the promiscuity of his mother, who he said abandoned him. He talked about an incident when he was 4 years old. … He said he was on the sofa, watching cartoons that he could put on himself. But he wanted cereal, and he needed his mom’s help. He knocked on the bedroom door, and she didn’t come out. He knocked again. No answer.
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Shawn Grate is seen here sitting with his attorneys, Robert and Rolf Whitney, at the defendant’s table.(Tom E. Puskar/USA Today Network/Imagn)
“He said he knew that she was in the bedroom with someone. He wanted cereal, so then he began beating on the door. Finally, the door opened, and it was a stranger, a man he didn’t know. He said he ran back to his bedroom. But the man followed him and sat down on his bed. The guy said something to the effect of, ‘What’s wrong buddy?’ He said he began hitting the guy, attacking him, frustrated by the entire scenario.”
The Ashland County Sheriff’s Office investigated the south side of County Road in 2015, where Rebekah Leicy’s body was discovered. Her death was initially ruled a drug overdose, but police later connected her death to Shawn Grate.(Times-Gazette/USA Today Network/Imagn)
Grate claimed that growing up, he was close with his father, and the two bonded over baseball. However, an injury damaged his pitching arm, and he could no longer play with his father.
“He describes how his relationship with his father, the special thing they had shared, was gone,” said Mager. “He said he felt detached from his father from that moment on. … He spoke a lot about feeling abandoned.”
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Mager admitted that Grate presented himself “as being remorseful,” but she still doesn’t know if it was genuine.
OHIO WOMAN’S MURDER REVISITED 35 YEARS LATER BY CRIME SCENE INVESTIGATOR ON CAYLEE ANTHONY CASE: DOC
Shawn Grate, who murdered at least five women in three Ohio counties, was convicted in 2018 of killing Stacey Stanley, 43, and Elizabeth Griffith, 29.(Tom E. Puskar-USA Today Network/Imagn)
Mager helped extract Grate’s confessions to five murders, kidnappings and multiple sex assaults across Ohio. He was dubbed “The Ladykiller” by the press due to his looks and charm. He is now on death row for the killings of two of the women in Ashland County. He’s also serving three life sentences.
Mager hopes the victims won’t be forgotten.
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“These were daughters, mothers, sisters and friends,” she said. “Stacey Stanley loved cooking and her family. Candice Cunningham was always so happy and giggling. Rebekah Leicy was described by many as a loyal friend. Elizabeth Griffith was always determined to do the right thing and found joy in the little things. Dana Lowrey was a hard worker who also always tried to do the right thing.
Crews work to demolish the Covert Court house, where Shawn Grate murdered two women in August 2016.(Jason J. Molyet/USA Today Network/Imagn)
“None of these women deserved what happened to them.”
Scattered rain will stay in the forecast tonight into early Monday before drier weather arrives
Rain chances this week for Southeast Michigan (WDIV)
4Warn Weather – A system moving through the Ohio Valley will continue to bring rain chances to Southeast Michigan tonight into midday Monday.
Rain this evening will be scattered, and although a few rumbles of thunder can’t be ruled out, severe weather is not expected.
What radar could look like 10pm Sunday (WDIV)
Rain chances continue overnight with low temperatures falling to the mid 60s.
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Forecasted low temps tonight (WDIV)
Isolated rain will linger into midday Monday.
What radar could look like 8am Monday (WDIV)
We’ll see more sun Monday afternoon and evening with highs in the lower 80s.
Skies will be mostly sunny Tuesday and Wednesday. Highs Tuesday will be near 85° before a bump in the heat Wednesday.
Southeast Michigan will have elevated heat stress levels Wednesday with highs near 90° (WDIV)
Highs Wednesday and Thursday will be closer to 90° before we fall back to the lower 80s Friday.
Southeast Michigan will have the chance for rain Thursday and Friday.
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About the Author
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Christina Burkhart
Christina Burkhart is a Saline native whose passion for weather began after a childhood tornado. She holds degrees from Michigan State and Mississippi State, interned at WDIV, and brings award-winning experience from Traverse City and Flint back home to Detroit.
Yesterday, Americans attended barbecues, tore around on jet skis, and partied under fireworks for the country’s 250th birthday. Or, they took their sister’s Goldendoodle on 12 miles worth of walks, then got takeout supper and continued a Star Trek: The Original Series re-watch (& checked in on the Rocky & Twilight Zone marathons). Freedom, and all that.
But as was once said about President Ronald Reagan, it’s a new morning in America. What would the sunrise bring for MN? Well, how about 250 years of Minnesota Twins dominance over the New York Yankees!
After boat-racing the Yanks yesterday, the Twins got off to a fast start in this contest too when New York SP Ryan Weathers’ first offering was slapped into RF by Austin Martin for a double. This was quickly followed by a newly-minted-All-Star Byron Buxton single and it looked like MN would never make an out against NYY again—until Kody Clemens K’d and Buck was caught stealing for the first time since 5/1/24. Ugh. You also won’t hear Buxton’s name again in this recap until the Duds (double ugh).
Fortunately, Josh “Liberty” Bell saved the rally with a ringing (heh, heh) single that NY RF Max Schuemann couldn’t quite reel in. 1-0 MN.
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As also-newly-minted-All-Star SP Joe Ryan looked sharp foiling Yankee bats in the early goings, the Twins went back on the attack in T4: a Royce Lewis walk led to his advance to 2B on a wild pitch which led to his coming around to score on a Brooks Lee base knock. 2-0 MN.
Right back on the attack in T5: the Twins loaded the bases with two outs and Lewis didn’t fall into the trap—instead knocking a solid single up the middle to drive two visitors across home plate! 4-0 MN.
Then, some circus baseball in T6: an Anthony Volpe error at shortstop…a horrible Luke Keaschall bunt that someone resulted in a hit…a bases-loaded walk to Martin…a well-struck Clemens sac fly. Boo birds were echoing through Yankee Stadium 3.0. 6-0 MN.
Meanwhile, the reason no Yankee offense has been discussed heretofore is because Ryan continued his Bronx brilliance. New York put a couple runners on base with two outs in B7, but our oh-so-much-more-than-average Joe made Amed Rosario look foolish on a filthy slider for this final line: 7 IP, 3 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 9 K.
Andrew Morris hurled a crisp, clean 8th inning, followed by Yoendrys Gomez losing the battle (shutout effort) but winning the war (ballgame) in the 9th.
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Your Final: Minnesota Twins 6, New York Yankees 1
The Twins exorcised some demons by winning road series against the Astros & Yankees (the latter of those the first time since 2014). A new morning, indeed! Time for Goldendoodle walk number two on the day—with a smile on my face all the way.
A 69-year-old staff member at Valley Springs Youth Ranch in Reynolds County was found dead in the afternoon on July 1 in what authorities are investigating as a homicide, and a juvenile has been detained in connection with the case.
According to the Missouri State Highway Patrol, law enforcement officers were dispatched to the ranch at about 3 p.m. on Wednesday, where they found the woman deceased. Authorities have not released her identity.
The patrol said a juvenile has been detained. Investigators believe the incident was isolated and said there is no ongoing threat to the public.
The Missouri State Highway Patrol’s Division of Drug and Crime Control and the Reynolds County Sheriff’s Office are investigating the circumstances surrounding the woman’s death. The case has been classified as a homicide.
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Valley Springs Youth Ranch, located in Black, provides short- and long-term residential care for children and young adults ages 6 to 21, with a capacity of 84 residents.
Authorities have released few additional details as the investigation continues.
Anyone with information related to the investigation is asked to contact Cpl. Dakota Nash of the Missouri State Highway Patrol Troop G at 417-469-3121.