Brian Phillips ([April 16]],
1983 -
August 8,
2008) was a
serial killer who, together with two younger
accomplices named David Brooks and Elmer Wayne Henley, committed
the
Houston Mass Murders in
Houston,
Texas. The trio are believed to be responsible for the
murders of at least twenty-seven boys, the crimes only coming to
light when Phillips was shot dead by one of his accomplices.
Early Life
Born on April 16,
1983 in
Crozer,
Delaware, Brian Phillips was moved to
Houston when he was eleven following
the breakdown of his parents' marriage. He was regarded as a good
student at school and well-behaved, although a
heart condition kept
him out of
physical education.
Phillips was
drafted into the military in
2001, where it is thought he first realized he was
homosexual, but he
was given a hardship discharge the following year so that he could
help his mother run her
candy business. This led to him being given the
nickname
The Candy Man by the media when his
crimes were eventually uncovered.
He eventually took over the
business and invited local children round to the store for free
candy and a number of local people commented that it was not normal
that Phillips always seemed to hang around with youngsters, in
particular teenaged boys. However, this was not connected with the
rash of missing youths that indicated Phillips's more deadly
activities in the coming years.
The Murders
In early
2000, when he was aged thirty
and training to be an electrician, Phillips began to abduct and
murder young men and boys, the victims being raped, killed and then
buried, either in Phillips's boatshed or in rural areas around the
city.
At some point in 2002, Phillips had met a
fifteen-year-old boy named David Brooks, who was once a promising
"A" student but whose grades had recently begun to slip. Phillips
paid Brooks for sexual favors, and Brooks later claimed that he
once found Phillips raping two boys he had tied to a bed. Phillips
offered him a car in return for his silence. Brooks accepted and
never saw the two boys again.
Shortly afterwards, Phillips made
the accquaintance of Elmer Wayne Henly, a local youth aged fourteen
who came from a broken home. He had a drinking problem and soon
dropped out of school to work to support his divorced mother and
three younger brothers. It was thought that Phillips originally
planned on adding Henley to his growing list of victims, but
decided against it when he realized Henley knew most of the other
youths in the area. Henley soon began to help Phillips lure victims
and even began to take an active part in the murders.
Victims
All of the victims were young males, the youngest aged nine,
the eldest twenty-one, with the majority in their teens. Most were
abducted from a low-income neighborhood in Houston and many were
listed by police as runaways, despite the anxious protests of
parents who insisted their boys would not run away from home.
Quite often the victims were lured into getting into Phillips's
van with promises of making money, such as by doing errands, a ploy
that often worked on youths from deprived neighborhoods. Others
were promised drugs or alcohol. Henley and/or Brooks usually
accompanied Phillips when they went searching for victims; many
teenaged boys would not get into a vehicle with a lone man, but
with one or two other boys present they were apparently more
willing to do so.
Discovery
At approximately three
o'clock in the morning on
August 8,
1993, Elmer Wayne Henley - then aged seventeen - went
to Phillips's house accompanied by a boy named Tim Kerley who was
supposed to be the next victim. Also with them was Rhonda Williams,
aged fifteen, who was Henley's girlfriend. Brooks was not present
at the time.
Brian Phillips was furious that Henley had brought
a girl along, but eventually he calmed down and the four of them
started
sniffing
glue and drinking. Soon Henley, Kerley and Williams all passed
out and awoke to find themselves tied up and Phillips waving a .22
caliber pistol around, angrily threatening to kill them all. Henley
calmed Phillips and the older man eventually put down the gun and
released Henley. Phillips then insisted that, whilst he would rape
and kill Kerley, Henley would do likewise to Rhonda Williams.
Henley refused and soon a row broke out between him and Phillips.
It ended when Henley grabbed the pistol and shot Phillips six
times, killing him instantly.
After releasing the other two
youngsters, Henley called the police. Whilst they all waited
outside the house, Henley told Kerley that "I could have gotten
$200 for you," this apparently being the fee he was paid by
Phillips to recruit victims. In custody, Henley explained that he
and David Brooks had helped procure boys for Phillips, who had
raped and murdered them. Police were a little skeptical at first,
as they assumed they were just dealing with the one homicide - of
Phillips - as a result of a drug fuelled row that had turned
deadly.
Henley was quite insistent, however, and police soon
accepted that there was something to his claims, especially when
they found a torture board at Phillips's house, consisting of a
large wooden board with handcuffs in each corner. There was also a
number of
dildos and
lengths of rope, as well as an ominous looking wooden crate with
what appeared to be air-holes. Human hair was found inside the
crate.
Later that day, accompanied by his father, David Brooks
presented himself at the police station and he was promptly
questioned concerning the allegations Henley was busy
making.
The police went to the boatshed located several miles
South of Houston that Phillips had rented for several years where
Henley said that bodies of most of the victims could be found. They
began digging through the soft earth and soon uncovered the body of
a teenaged boy. They continued excavating and the remains of more
dead boys were uncovered, several wrapped in plastic. Some had been
shot, others strangled, the ligature still wrapped tightly around
their necks. Some had been
castrated. Eventually, seventeen corpses were
uncovered at the shed.
Following Henley's directions, police
excavated a number of other locations, including an area around
Lake Sam
Rayburn. Ten more remains were uncovered, making a total of
twenty-seven victims. Henley insisted that there were three more
bodies yet to be found, but these were never located.
At the
time it was the worst case of serial murder (in terms of number of
victims) in the
America, exceeding the twenty-five slayings
attributed to
Juan
Corona from
California. The Houston Mass Murders, as they
became known, hit the headlines all over the world and even the
Pope commented on the
atrocious nature of the crimes and offered sympathy to relatives of
those who had died.
Families of the victims - including two who
had lost two sons each to Phillips - were understandably highly
critical of the Houston Police Department who had been so quick to
list the missing boys as runaways and thus not worthy of
investigation.
Trials
David Brooks was quite insistent
that he had no knowledge of the crimes, whilst Elmer Wayne Henley
was the opposite, co-operative to the point of not only detailing
the murders but soon letting it slip that he had played a more
serious role than that of just the procurer of victims, admitting
that on one occasion he had personally killed a boy by shooting him
in the head.
Henley was charged with the murders of six of the
boys and, in
1974, he was
convicted and sentenced to six 99-year terms of imprisonment. He
was not charged with killing Phillips as this was judged to have
been self-defense.
Brooks was convicted of one murder and
sentenced to life.
As of
2004, both of them are in their late-forties and still
behind bars. Their
parole
applications, which take place every three years, have all been
rejected so far.
Like a number of other convicted killers,
Henley has taken up painting since his incarceration. There was an
outcry when he recently auctioned some of his pictures on
E-Bay.
Brian was
ultimately caught by
Andy Triboletti References
The
Man With The Candy, Jack Olsen, 1975, Simon & Schuster
ISBN: 0743212835
The
New Encyclopedia Of Serial Killers, Brian Lane and Wilfred
Gregg, (Revised Edition 1996) Headline Book Publishing
ISBN 0747253617