Family Annihilator William Bradford Bishop: After 44 Years, Still Alive?
Forty-four years ago this month, State Department Foreign Service officer William Bradford Bishop brutally murdered his wife, mother and three young sons in their Bethesda home. He's never been caught. He was on the FBI's Most Wanted list a few years ago. If alive, he'd be 83 today. Is he still living?
This unsolved case continues to attract interest. Here's a brief recent update by Washington's WUSA9 television station (click link for video).
BETHESDA, Md. — If you’ve been watching FBI Most Wanted on CBS, you know just how hard federal agents work to track down killers
But one of our region’s most brutal alleged killers has never been caught.
Forty-four years ago this month, State Department Foreign Service Officer William Bradford Bishop allegedly murdered his whole family in Bethesda – and disappeared.
There are some in law enforcement who will never give up the hunt – like former backwoods ranger Dwight McCarter.
"We’re at Jakes Creek Trailhead," McCarter said as we followed up to the spot in Great Smoky Mountains National Park where investigators say Bishop dumped his blood-spattered family station wagon.
"The car was pulled in right here," McCarter said, pointing to a densely wooded spot. "'74 Chevrolet station wagon."
In 1976, McCarter was part of a massive, weeks-long search for the accused killer. "One of the rangers noticed the car, and he thought maybe it was a backpacker," McCarter said. "They run the plate and it turns out that guy was wanted by the FBI. And then it turned into a rather large search here. Just people squeezed in everywhere."
Backwoods ranger Dwight McCarter suspects this might have been where Bradford Bishop buried the family dog, Leo. But the possible grave has been lost to time. The FBI developed a bust of what Bradford Bishop might have looked like a few years ago. The sledgehammer Bradford Bishop allegedly used to murder his whole family. Inside the Bishop home in Bethesda during the investigation. The Bishop home in Bethesda shortly after the murders. Bradford Bishop with one of his three sons. The logging road where Bishop allegedly dumped his family's bodies. The family station wagon Bradford Bishop allegedly used to transport the bodies. The site where Bishop allegedly buried his family and set their bodies on fire.
"This is Bishop’s family. You know, you would have thought they were the perfect family," said Montgomery County Sheriff Darren Popkin, scrolling through pictures of the Bishops. "They seemed to be very happy. They would go to the beach. Go skiing."
Sheriff Popkin has been haunted by the murders since he was a teenager in the Carderock Springs neighborhood off River Road. "I was 14... I had some friends that lived literally right down the street from them."
Bishop was a US Foreign Service Officer. He’d been in military intelligence. He aspired to be an ambassador.
Deeply ambitious, investigators said he’d been passed over for promotion and was struggling financially. He'd been seeing a psychiatrist, according to investigators.
"He wanted to portray this perfect family that was kind of carefree, had lots of money. And actually, they were running out of money," said Sheriff Popkin.
Investigators said on March 1, 1976, Bishop told his boss he was sick, went to the Sears at Montgomery Mall, bought a sledgehammer and a gas can, fueled up the station wagon, got a shovel and pitchfork at a Bethesda hardware store, went home – and killed his wife, his three sons, and his mother.
"He took the hammer he had bought and beat her over the head and killed her in just a terrible, terrible, horrendous way," said Popkin. "The boys were already in their pajamas; they were in their beds. He went room by room and beat them to death one by one. The blood pattern will show you that he goes back to the front of the house, then he killed his own mother."Steve Gendel reports on the Bishop Family murders in 1976Police said he spared the family dog, piling Leo into the family station wagon with the bodies. Investigators said he drove south to North Carolina, dumped the bodies in a grave he'd dug and set them on fire, and then drove to the Great Smoky Mountains and vanished.
He was on the most wanted list for a few years, and there have been credible sightings in Italy, Sweden, and Switzerland. But every lead has turned up dry. USA9's Mike Buchanan reports on the composite sketch of William Bradford Bishop in 1979"They are just a beautiful family and that’s really what continues to drive me every time I see their beautiful faces," said Popkin.
"I think he’s gone," said McCarter. "I think he finally realized what he’d done. And he came here (to the Smokies), and he couldn’t get no peace."
Bishop would be 83 now, so if he’s alive, there may not be much time left to bring him to justice.
If you have any idea where he is, you can call the FBI at 1-800-CALL-FBI.