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The Homicidal Handyman

of Oak Park:

Morris Solomon Jr.

 

One’s vocabulary is inadequate to describe the crimes as we piece them together. We don’t know how long these women suffered, wondering when it would end, if they would be released, or if they would die. Of course, most of them died.

 

 

 

 

 

Peter Mering, Sacramento Superior Court Judge
on the Morris Solomon Jr. court case,
published in the Sacramento Union, page A-14,
Steve Sebelius, Union Staff Writer,
Wednesday, September 16, 1992

AS FAR AS FITTING THE STEREOTYPES bestowed to infamous chain-link murderers that exist outside African American culture, there was a time when black serial killers were recognized, to some extent, implausible by purported experts who probably cared not to explore the primary nature of the slayers’ transgressions.

Nevertheless, the obscured story of handyman Morris Solomon Jr. has to be one of the most interesting tales untold as it is one of the most horrific yarns in the annals of American crime. The handyman’s misdeeds, when briefly brought to the public’s attention, virtually reminded society that killers continuously come in all colors, shapes, and sizes.

Solomon was convicted of killing six young women, ages 16 to 29, in the Sacramento, California, neighborhood of Oak Park between 1986 and 1987. The handyman’s grisly method of murder left detectives and medical examiners mystified. The identification process of his victims’ remains was distinctly a laborious assignment, too.

The victims —drug addicts, prostitutes, and devout mothers — were stuffed in closets, hidden under debris, and arguably, one court judge strongly considers, buried alive. In retrospect, the handyman was first accused of murder in the mid-1970s; and authorities suspect him to be linked to four more homicides in Sacramento.

Solomon — once declared as a “Mentally Disordered Sex Offender”— is now on death row in Northern California’s San Quentin State Prison awaiting execution. The unassuming handyman’s 18-year reign of terror includes a record of sexual assaults, attempted kidnappings, and separate despicable sex acts performed strictly for humiliation.

In The Homicidal Handyman of Oak Park: Morris Solomon Jr., author and journalist Tony Ray Harvey recounts the black serial killer’s dysfunctional upbringing, atrocious crimes, and hardly noticeable court trial.

Harvey’s book also provides explicit crime scene photos, the history of the death penalty system in the state of California, the city of Sacramento’s drug culture in the mid-1980s, and exclusive prison interviews of the mild-mannered handyman.

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