Kidnapping, murder of woman rocked community

web_murder_mystery.jpgThe abduction and murder of Mary Lloyd 23 years ago still remains an unsolvable mystery to homicide detectives and a lasting horrible memory to Lloyd’s family.

The disappearance of the popular woman also sent a chill through the community that reverberated for months. The finding of her body near Applegate also revived the tragedy, shaking the soul and heart of the community once again.

Police detectives remain baffled about the case, and never were able to positively identify a suspect. They theorize that the kidnapping and murder suspect may have died in a western prison or fled the country.

The small, friendly woman had just attended mass at St. Joseph Catholic Church on June 25, 1985 and stopped by the Safeway Store at Highway 49 and Elm Street to purchase a quart of milk.

It was a quiet, warm Tuesday morning, and no one would have thought any harm would have come to the small, blonde lady, who was respected throughout the town as a caring, personable woman. She never had a clue that day that her life was in peril, not in the quiet foothill town where vicious crimes were almost unknown.

When the diminutive 68-year-old mother of four left the store to get in her 1984 white Mercury Cougar to drive to her Bowman home, an unidentified man waited in or near her car. Witnesses reported they saw the man striking Lloyd in the car and observed a struggle going between the two. Several persons rushed to her aid and there were unconfirmed reports the man had a gun before he took control of her car and drove toward Interstate 80.

Authorities said the four-foot eight-inch tall woman was no match for her assailant who witnesses described as about a 200-pound mustachioed man, 35 to 40 years of age, with curly graying black hair. Mrs. Lloyd’s body was found eight days later along an isolated road near Applegate.

Mrs. Lloyd’s car was found 12 days later parked along Victory Boulevard, a main thoroughfare in North Hollywood.  Police Chief Nick Willick, and investigators James Weldon and Scott Burns, joined in the hunt for the suspect. An FBI agent also participated in the event the suspect had crossed state lines with Lloyd.

They reported that full fingerprints and other possible evidence had been wiped clean from the car, and detectives found no clues to the man who kidnapped and killed her.

Willick, who knew the Lloyd family well, commented about the abduction and murder saying,  “This is probably my worst day in law enforcement. It is a very sorrowful day when anyone could have assaulted a person like that anywhere in the U.S., particularly in Auburn.”

Although there were witnesses to the assault and kidnapping of Mrs. Lloyd, no one was ever arrested or considered a prime suspect.

Edward Leighton, a truck driver at the time and now a deputy sheriff, saw the attacker and helped provide a description of the man for a composite drawing of the suspect. The kidnapping and murder drew wide media attention, and A&E cable produced a video about the crime that was aired throughout the country.

Tim Lloyd, the victim’s son, said Leighton reportedly scanned through a sheriff’s mugshot book and identified an inmate who died in a West Coast prison as the person who he saw kidnapping Mrs. Lloyd.

Auburn police investigators doggedly pursued any lead they had in an attempt to solve the murder, but all leads, some of them considered relevant to the case, did not lead to an arrest.  They traveled to various locations in the West to follow up and question potential suspects.

Heart Federal and Loan Association, where her husband Richard Lloyd worked, offered a $10,000 reward for the arrest and conviction of the suspect. It was never was claimed.

Burns, along with other police investigators, now believes that the kidnapper and murderer is deceased.  Other theories are that the suspect may have fled to Mexico or other out-of-country places.

Leo Lee of San Francisco, where he had been a night editor for the San Francisco Examiner, described his sister as, “One of the, most loving persons I ever knew. She was the type of person who would help anyone. She just had that instinct for doing good things. If something was needed to be done she would to it.”

Since the murder of Lloyd, her husband, brother and a son, David, have died, but the two daughters and son, Tim Lloyd, still grieve the loss of their mother with hopes that the man who murdered her, if alive, is brought to justice.

Tim believes that the man who died in prison was the person who kidnapped and killed his mother. “I’m convinced of that,” he said.

* * *

Unsolved murders in Placer County, no matter how long ago they occurred, remain active in law enforcement case files. There are a number of vicious murders still being investigated since there is no statute of limitation for a homicide. These cold case files remain open and detectives continue to look for clues and information that could lead to solving the crimes. The Sentinel will be revisiting some of those brutal, unsolved slayings, and the progress in bringing the murderer or murderers to justice, in future editions.

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