Michael Bruce Ross: Staring Death in the Face
Truth and Consequences
Detective Michael Malchik, who worked on the Tammy Williams case, was assigned to chief investigator of Wendy’s murder case. Malchik began his investigation by pursuing the car that witnesses claimed to have seen. Elliott said that Malchik printed out a list of 3,600 locally owned blue
Malchik described the visit as “a roller coaster ride” because every time he was about to leave the apartment, Michael would “drop him a crumb that would make him think that he should ask more questions,” Elliott reported. Eventually, Michael couldn’t withhold his ghastly secrets any longer and confessed to some of his crimes. Initially, he told Malchik only of Wendy Baribeault’s murder but then later, while in police custody, he confessed to also killing April Brunais, Leslie Shelley, Tammy Williams, Deborah Taylor and Robin Stravinsky. It would be years before he would claim responsibility for killing Paula Perrera and Dzung Ngoc Tu.

In July 1987, Michael went on trial for Deborah Taylor and Tammy Williams' murders. He pled guilty to their murders and received a maximum sentence of 120 years. The following month he was tried for the murders of Wendy Baribeault, April Brunais, Leslie Shelley and Robin Stravinsky and convicted. He received a total of two life sentences and six death sentences.


In July 1994, The Connecticut State Supreme Court decided to uphold Michael’s murder convictions but overturned the death sentences, “finding that the original trial judge excluded evidence that might have helped Ross prove he suffered from a mental illness or defect,” Richard Biegenwald reported in a 2000 Serial Killer Hit List article. As a result, the court ordered a new penalty hearing, which would be delayed for several years. In the meantime, Michael battled his psychological problems and courted death.
































