
After nine murders, they stopped abruptly. Police waited through the holidays, and then on February 17, 1978, a helicopter patrol spotted an orange car crashed off a highway. Locked inside the trunk was victim number 10: Cindy Hudspeth, age 20.

The girls were found murdered and the evidence against Bianchi was good enough for an arrest. It didn
Yet Bianchi pulled a fast one and pretended to have multiple personality disorder. Then he was tricked into revealing his fakery by the prosecution's psychiatrist, so he reluctantly made a deal to turn on his cousin in exchange for life in prison.
Fox and Levin indicate that Bianchi's girlfriend was taken completely by surprise when he was charged. She considered him a gentle person.
In 1982, Buono's trial commenced. An eyewitness took the stand who had seen one abduction. He described the car and Angelo Buono as the driver. Fibers on another victim had come from a chair in Buono
Yet there had been an interesting twist during the trial. Buono's defense attorney had brought to the stand a woman, Veronica Lynn Compton, who testified that she had conspired with Bianchi to kill women in the manner of the Hillside Stranglers and thereby bring reasonable doubt to his case. They had intended to frame Angelo Buono and make him take the heat for everything.
In other words, Bianchi had managed to convince one of his prison groupies to actually go out and kill someone for him. In June 1980, Compton, a playwright and actress, had contacted Bianci in prison, according to Court TV
In his Encyclopedia of Serial Killers,
Veronica was arrested and tried for attempted murder. Her one "acting job" had backfired and she was convicted. Her hope to get Bianchi out of prison and unite with him had separated them permanently. Even more damaging was her testimony on Buono's behalf.
Nevertheless, both men eventually found love in prison. In 1986, Buono married Christina Kizuka, a mother of three, who met him via another inmate. Bianchi married Shirlee Book in 1989 after a three-year correspondence. He was just one of many prisoners to whom she had written, and Bundy, too, had been on her list. She believed that Bianchi would eventually regain his freedom to be with her. Isenberg states that Book had bought her wedding gown and invitations before she had even met Bianchi. Their wedding was quite formal, if not in a church.

In addition to revealing the kooky plot she'd dreamed up with Bianchi during Buono's trial, she also admitted on the stand that she and serial killer Douglas Clark were planning to purchase a mortuary together so they could have sex with the dead. How she got involved with him is another story.



