An excerpt from the book, “Pensacola’s Finest” available from Amazon

By Mike Simmons

The Capture of Ted Bundy

Yesterday was forty-seven years since Ted Bundy last saw freedom, and it happened in West Pensacola.

Working the graveyard shift is…different. Sometimes it’s slow, sometimes it’s crazy, and sometimes it’s – creepy. When the world is winding down, midnight shift workers are just beginning. Some police officers like it while others hate it. There are a few advantages to working the midnight shift. The streets are usually less busy, the officers are usually less busy, and the heavy brass of the department is not at work, making for less tension. However, a common statement by officers is “If you get into something on midnights, it’s really…something!

Officer David Lee

1:30 AM on Wednesday, February 15, 1978 was a quiet time for David Lee.  Officer Lee was a Pensacola Police Officer, working the midnight shift on the west side of Pensacola. Two of the qualities of a good beat officer are to know the people and businesses on his beat and to protect them like a guard dog. That is what Officer Lee did.  As he usually did when working midnights, Officer Lee was checking the buildings on his beat. His main objective was to prevent and foil burglaries. 

Old friends met there.  It was that kind of place – when you walked in, you probably knew somebody, or felt like you did. Most people loved eating at Oscar’s Restaurant. When it was open, the parking lot was usually full. And it was not unusual to find one of Pensacola’s Finest eating there. It was a Pensacola icon. Located in an old building in a less-than-affluent area of town, Oscar’s had that special charm that drew people to it. It felt…familiar.  

David Lee drove his patrol car slowly through back streets, between the businesses and along Cervantes Street. He used his spotlight to better see that neighborhoods and businesses were safe. As he eased his cruiser behind Oscar’s Restaurant, 2805 West Cervantes Street, he saw an orange Volkswagen Beetle in the parking lot. This sight attracted David’s attention. Like all good beat cops, he knew the employees at Oscars and what they drove. “Strange” he thought to himself. “Nobody that works here drives a VW. He tried to think of scenarios that would cause such a sight. He considered driving off, but the guard dog in him convinced him to go back, so he decided to check it out. Just then, the vehicle fled from the parking lot. As Officer Lee followed it, he called in his situation on the radio, checking the tag. It came back as a stolen vehicle belonging to Kenneth Misner from Tallahassee. This transmission attracted the attention of other officers, who headed toward David.

Officer Lee prepared to stop it. However, the Volkswagen sped up in an obvious attempt to elude David. Finally, the car pulled over at “W” and Cross streets near Catholic High School. David ordered the driver out of the car and made him lie down. When Lee approached, the man kicked Lee’s legs from under him and a fight ensued. Finally, the man broke free and began running northeast with David in pursuit. Finally, Officer Lee subdued the man and placed him in cuffs. He was taken to jail. A search of the man’s possessions and of the contents of the car revealed several documents, including many credit cards, in the name of Kenneth Misner, the owner of the stolen car. Things didn’t add up. Why would a man be driving his own stolen car?

Kenneth Misner’s Volkswagen stolen by Ted Bundy in Tallahassee, Florida

Detective Norman Chapman lived 40 miles from the police station, near the small town of Jay, Florida. He lived out in the country, and his accent and mannerisms reflected his laid-back country life.  When Norman got out of the U. S. Army, he decided to become a Pensacola Police Officer. Soon, he was transferred to Investigations as a detective. In the early morning hours of February 15, Norman’s phone rang. 

Norman Chapman

“Sorry to wake you detective, but you need to come in. Officer Lee stopped a vehicle that is listed as stolen out of Tallahassee. We have the driver in custody.”

State Attorney Curtis Golden giving a press release with Officer David Lee
Press release in front of the Pensacola Police Headquarters, 40 S. Alcaniz St.

Rubbing the sleep from his eyes, Norman began the business of getting dressed and heading out. Detectives make a habit of having clothing and equipment laid out – just in case they are called into work during the night. When Detective Chapman arrived, he met the man…who agreed that he was Kenneth Misner. The man was not used to Norman’s slow, southern drawl, but he liked him. The man made the mistake of believing the stereotype of a southern country boy being slow, backward, and unintelligent. Chapman interviewed the man and immediately made a connection with him. Chapman sensed there was something different about this man who called himself Kenneth Misner, something unusual that the man was hiding. Chapman established, not a friendship, but a relationship with the man which would last for many years. The man was very personable and extremely intelligent. However, he was proud of himself. His pride was the element that Detective Chapman focused on. In an almost Gomer Pyle manner, Norman acted as if he was fascinated with the man’s intelligence. As he freely spoke with the man, something wasn’t right. He had just been arrested in a stolen car with stolen items, fled from the police, and then tried to take an officer’s weapon. Yet he appeared relaxed and smooth. He was personable – almost charming. How would a man of his intelligence and ability find himself in this situation? It didn’t feel right. The man was fingerprinted and his prints were immediately sent to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. A few days later came the the reply…Theodore Robert Bundy. Ted Bundy was one of the most infamous rapists and serial killers in history, taking the lives of at least 30 innocent female victims. Some experts believe the total to be over 100 victims.

Bundy’s mug shot at the Pensacola Police Department

            Ted Bundy’s name had been in the papers and on television across the United States. He was last seen in the northwest where he escaped and fled. He was on the FBI’s Ten Most-Wanted List. The infamous serial murderer and escape artist had disappeared from the Glenwood Springs, CO Jail and resurfaced in Pensacola. During the hours that Chapman interviewed Bundy, he made statements that were to prove significant in the murder case of Kimberly Leach, a 12-year-old girl who was murdered in Lake City and buried in a shallow grave nearby. Bundy was subsequently found guilty of this crime and sentenced to die in the electric chair.

Ted Bundy guarded by Pensacola Police Officers

            The information which Bundy related to Detective Chapman was important to the case. As Bundy’s date with electric chair “Old Sparky” neared, he requested that Chapman – now the chief of police – come to visit him on death row. Chief Chapman knew that Bundy wanted to tell where more bodies were buried. It was obvious that Bundy wanted to extend his life by having additional charges brought against him, therefore postponing his execution. Chapman refused to see Bundy, who was put to death on January 24, 1989.

Old Sparky, Florida’s Electric Chair

7 Responses

  1. I was working patrol that night. While stopping by the Desk Sergeant’s , Bundy was being booked… a John Doe. He was talking, sounding friendly and out going. When he was identified the station went into lock down…. Officers at each enterance and at his jail cell. I was asked for my ID even though I was in uniform. David’s professionalism and Norm’s interviewing ensured his capture and prosecution.
    Skip Bollens, retired PPD

  2. David was an exceptional officer. He had an uncanny ability to find stolen cars or see unusual activity amongst a crowd. Enjoyed working with him. That night David was working “All Over” on the West side of Pensacola. I was working the Brownsville area and picked up a call if a drunk on Cervantes near T St. As I was loading up my prisoner, David pulled up to check on me. After I confirmed I was David said he was going to check buildings along Cervantes. I headed to the office, David headed West. About three minutes later David radioed he has a suspicious car behind Oscars, then radioed the car was running Nirth in W Street. I listened as he eventually got the car stopped, had to foot chase the suspect and then announced he had the suspect in custody. While at the City PD, I had booked my drunk when David came in with his prisoner. The Desk Sergeant asked me to print the prisoner, which I did. During the printing process, the individual stated ” When you guys find out who I am, that officer who caught me will be famous”. Thinking he was just a wanna be bragger, I said sure and finished fingerprinting. We learned that Bundy was the David caught. A good Cop caught a lethal killer and saved many women’s lives from that capture and putting Pensacola in the history books.

    1. I know that Tyson was working at PPD when Bundy was captured, and he was probably one of the responding officers. I believe that a bunch of the officers were involved in some way, and Tyson was probably one of them. I wasn’t there, but a bunch of the officers who were visit this website.

  3. Is Ken K still living? He tickles me the way he is bound & determined Ted would not escape the Leon County Jail!!!!

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