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Thursday, January 07, 2010 - 3:20 PM
On January 15, 1974, a chilly winter day, 15-year-old Charlie Otero
began his afternoon walk home from school. Charlie, his parents, and
four siblings had recently moved into a quiet peaceful suburban
neighborhood in a small frame house located at 803 North Edgemoor
Street. Charlie, happy that another school day had come to an
end, walked gingerly up the side walk towards his home. As he opened
the front door and walked into the living room, nothing immediately
seemed out of the ordinary. "Hello, is anyone home?" he called out into
the quiet house. There was no response. Not even a bark from his dog.
Such quiet was unusual. With some trepidation, Charlie walked toward
his parents' bedroom. A strange feeling of dread welled up inside him.  Julie Otero Charlie's
father, Joseph, 38, was lying face down on the floor at the foot of his
bed; his wrists and ankles had been bound. His mother, Julie, 34, lay
on the bed bound in similar fashion, only she had been gagged. For a
few seconds, Charlie could not move, he didn't know what to do.
Moments later his senses came back to him and he rushed out in
desperation to get help for his parents, not realizing that he had
experienced only a portion of the horror that the house had in store. Joseph Otero A neighbor who came over to the house to help realized that when he tried to call the police, the phone lines had been severed. Joseph Otero II As
the police searched the house, they were shocked to find nine-year-old
Joseph II in his bedroom face down on the floor at the foot of his
bed. His wrists and ankles were also bound, the only difference being
that over his head was a hood -- and according to one reporter, he had
three hoods covering his head. Josephine Otero The
worst was yet to come. Downstairs in the basement, Charlie's
eleven-year-old sister, Josephine, was discovered hanging by her neck
from a pipe; she was partially nude, dressed only in a sweatshirt and
socks, and she had been gagged.Investigators were stunned at this daytime execution-style multiple murder in such a quiet neighborhood. From
the very beginning of this case, police have been very cautious about
revealing the details of the murders. What they did say was that all
four of the victims had been strangled with lengths of cord cut from a
Venetian blind. There were no cords like that in he house, so the
killer had brought the cords, hoods, tape, wire cutters and possibly a
gun with him. According to Capt. Paul Dotson of the Wichita
Police Department, semen was found throughout the house, and it
appeared as though the killer had masturbated on some of the victims,
although none had been sexually assaulted. Joseph Otero's watch was
missing from the scene and has never been recovered. Aside from Julie
Otero's purse being dumped and the missing watch, there was no real
evidence of forced entry, robbery, or a struggle. The coroner
determined that all four murders occurred well before noon and very
likely around 8 or nine in the morning. Police theorized that while
Joseph Otero was driving the older three children to school that the
murderer gained entry into the house where Julie and her two younger
children were by themselves. Once the killer subdued and bound the
three of them, he waited for Joseph to come home to take the younger
two children to school and caught him by surprise. Someone had put the
Oteros' notoriously unfriendly large dog out in back of the house. The
killer hung around for about an hour an a half, then took the Otero
family car and left it parked near Dillons grocery not far away.
Otero's neighbors noticed a man, possibly with a dark
complexion, leaving Otero's home in their car.  The Otero's car was discovered in Oliver Square's parking lot Police
initially wondered just who these Oteros were and what they had done to
warrant this brutal execution. Several things they learned suggested
motives, but nothing conclusive. Joseph Otero had been born in
Puerto Rico and, after moving to the States, began a career in the
military. Just before his death, he had retired from the Air Force
where he was a flight instructor and mechanic. He was physically very
fit and was an excellent boxer. His colleagues liked him and no one
could voice a motive for his slaying. The same type of report
came back on Julie. She had recently been caught in a downsizing at
Coleman Company, but she would have been rehired when business picked
up again. She, too, was a friendly person and a very good mother. Like
her husband, she was very accomplished in the art of self-defense. She
had extensive training in judo. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
 A police sketch of the man believed to have been seen in the area
The Otero children were very good in school and were liked by the
people who knew them. They, too, took up the family sport of judo and
were well beyond the average when it came to self defense.So, what
to make of this case? This brilliantly planned and orchestrated crime
which required surveillance, perfect timing, and the ability to subdue
a group of people who were normally more than capable to defending
themselves. It had the hallmarks of a military operation, but then
there were these nagging details that the police didn't want to
discuss. Police Chief Floyd Hannon told the Wichita Eagle in January of
1974 that "the way in which family members were slain indicates
a fetish on the part of the assailant."
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