The Ripper Crew abducted and murdered women in the '80s. Now Thomas Kokoraleis, 58, is set to go free.
Christy Gutowski
Chicago Tribune
March 29, 2019, 11:10 AM
After nearly four decades in prison, one member of a sadistic four-man crew whose sexually motivated crimes were so depraved that authorities compared their acts to a modern-day Jack the Ripper or Charles Manson is expected to be free on Friday. ... Based on their own recorded statements and signature style of mutilating their victims, the group known as the Ripper Crew is thought to be responsible for the slayings of as many as 17 women and for an unrelated fatal shooting of a man in the early 1980s. Authorities said they stalked streets in Chicago and the west and northwest suburbs in a reddish-orange van in search of lone women to abduct.
Update: Murderer from notorious Ripper Crew released, heads to Wheaton to begin life as a free man »
At 58, Thomas Kokoraleis is likely the only member of the group who will get a chance to rejoin society. He originally received a life sentence for his role in the murder of a 21-year-old Elmhurst woman who was abducted outside the suburban office where she worked in May 1982, but a series of legal maneuvers and now-defunct sentencing rules
allowed for him to go free after serving just half his prison term.
Timeline: Sadistic exploits, innocent victims of the Ripper Crew
His younger brother Andrew was executed by lethal injection 20 years ago this month at age 35, before Illinois abolished the death penalty. The other two defendants have exhausted their appeals and probably will die in prison, though one will be eligible for parole if he lives to be 89.
....
Warren Wilkosz, a former DuPage County sheriff detective whose work helped end the crews cruel run, described passing out flyers to prostitutes along Cicero Avenue with a description of the van. Chicago police eventually located it, with Spreitzer behind the wheel, which led authorities to the rest of the men. The teenage prostitute identified Gecht as her assailant in a police lineup held in the hospital where she was recovering. ... Years later, Wilkosz witnessed Andrew Kokoraleis execution. Long retired, Wilkosz said he doesnt have strong feelings about Thomas Kokoraleis release. Gecht, though, would be a whole different thing, he said. ... He made Manson look like a Boy Scout.
cmgutowski@chicagotribune.com
Twitter @christygutowsk1
Associated Press contributed