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Faith
04-19-2008, 09:02 AM
The Disappearance of Debbie Key

http://www.ncwanted.com/asset/2008/04/18/2756358/key--feature-510x191.jpg
Saturday, in an exclusive interview with NC WANTED, the suspect in her disappearance is talking. In 2005, after a controversial investigation and despite confessing to Debbie's murder, Andrew Dalzell's cahrges were dropped and he became a free man.

Posted: Apr. 18, 2008 12:03 p.m.
Updated: Apr. 18, 2008 3:35 p.m.

ORANGE COUNTY: Ten years ago, Debbie Key went missing from a Carrboro bar. Although authorities suspect she was murdered, they never found her body.

Saturday, in an exclusive interview with NC WANTED, the suspect in her disappearance is talking. In 2005, after a controversial investigation and despite confessing to Debbie's murder, Andrew Dalzell's charges were dropped and he became a free man.

He tells NC WANTED his version of the events surrounding Debbie's disappearance and about the cloud of suspicion that has lingered over him for years.

Tune in Saturday at 10:35 pm on FOX 50.

If you have any information about the disappearance on Debbie Key, call NC WANTED toll free at 1.866.43.WANTED (1.866.439.2683) or click on "Report a Tip" Your identity can be kept confidential.

____________________________

Call it an act of desperation. Call it a last resort. When the Carrboro Police Department drew up a fake letter and phony arrest warrant for the man suspected of murdering 35-year-old Deborah Key, they got what they were hoping for: a killer’s confession. But their investigative tactics backfired and the confession was thrown out of court.

Now, 10 years later, they are sitting on square one.

November 30, 1997. Deborah Key went out to one of her favorite places, a local bar and pool hall off Main Street in Carrboro called Sticks and Stones.

That night, a 19-year-old man with a ponytail and backward baseball cap caught Debbie’s attention. It wasn’t his first time at the bar, but no one knew his name. Regulars called him “The Artist.” He would sit at the bar, sip on soda and sketch pictures of nude women.

Debbie was single and lived with her mother in Chapel Hill. She loved animals and children. She earned most of her money from babysitting jobs around town, and lived a nomadic lifestyle. She often would leave home for days at a time.

Friends say Debbie liked to drink. Investigators say she often would leave whatever bar she was at with anyone promising free alcohol.

That night, The Artist bought Debbie a few drinks and the two spent most of the night chatting and flirting inside the bar.

When the bar closed around 2:30 a.m., investigators said the bar owner saw Debbie and “The Artist” hugging and kissing in the parking lot next to the bar.

Two days later, one of Debbie’s friends called Debbie’s mother to tell her that Debbie’s Pontiac Sunbird was illegally parked in the lot beside Sticks and Stones. When Debbie’s mother arrived at the car, it was unlocked and Debbie’s purse was on the front seat.

“She’d put her purse in the trunk. She’d put her key in her pocket,” Debbie's friend Joy Presslar said. “So, when we heard that her car was unlocked and purse was on the front with her coat, we knew that she’d been taken against her will or that something had happened, because it was so out of character for her to leave her things like that.”

A Frustrating Investigation

The Carrboro Police Department and the State Bureau of Investigation began to gather information, immediately suspecting foul play. They have never give up hope that Debbie is still alive, they say, but they worked the case as a homicide from the start.

They processed Debbie’s car as a crime scene. But when they received the car, investigators say, it seemed that the car had been detailed. The possibility of gathering physical evidence had been lost.

“Any possible fingerprints, any hairs and fibers inside the car that would have been left by someone else besides Debbie would have been vacuumed up (in the cleaning),” said John Hawthorne, a former SBI agent.

Pressing forward, authorities worked to retrace Debbie’s steps the last night she was seen.

Based on eyewitness accounts, they developed and distributed a composite sketch of The Artist, but they continued to explore other avenues, interviewing anyone they could find who knew Debbie or was at the bar that night.

They hone in on two men, one of whom just finished serving a lengthy sentence for kidnapping and assaulting a woman. Although both men seem to be strong suspects, they both pass polygraph tests and are eliminated.

Months pass without any sign of Debbie or The Artist.

In March, the co-owner of Sticks and Stones spotted The Artist in Chapel Hill. Authorities arrived at the bar and saw the Artist in the parking lot.

The Artist

His name is Andrew Douglas Dalzell. Police asked whether he was the person seen standing with Debbie in the parking lot of Sticks and Stones in the early morning of December 1, 1997. At first he denied the allegations. But confronted with eyewitness accounts that put him with Debbie, he admitted it was him.

He refused to come in for questioning but said he would take a polygraph in the near future. By the next day, Dalzell got an attorney who advised that he not take a polygraph or submit to any interviews.

A month after identifying Dalzell, authorities obtained a warrant to search his car. They took the car to the SBI lab and their suspicions were immediately riled.

A huge blood stain on the backseat. Women's underclothing.

But it all comes back negative. The blood stain is from Dalzell’s injured dog and the hair and fibers they find don’t match Debbie.
All signs point to Dalzell, but with no physical evidence and no body, the case languishes – this time for years.


Honing In

September 2004. Dalzell contacted Carrboro Police seeking security assistance as he moves out of his apartment, because he feels threatened by a man who stole more than $1,000 worth of property from him.

While providing security protection for Dalzell, the investigator noticed some items around the house from a hobby store called Hungate’s where Dalzell used to work – some still with price tags on.

Authorities drew up an arrest warrant for obtaining property by false pretenses and identity theft. By this time, Dalzell and his girlfriend were living in Stanly with his girlfriend’s parents. Lt. John Lau devises a plan to get Dalzell to make a statement about Debbie’s disappearance and presumed murder.

Plan A

Neither Lau nor former district attorney, now-judge Carl Fox, would go on the record about what happened behind closed doors, but according to media reports and official court documents, Lau and Fox came up with a plan to get information out of Dalzell.

Lau told investigators to wait to serve the arrest warrants. In the meantime, police drew up a fake arrest warrant and fake letter from the district attorney’s office in hopes of getting Dalzell to make a statement.

Various media reported that Fox gave Lau a piece of his letterhead, wished him good luck and said, “You have nothing to lose.” But Carl Fox told the media that he had few details of the plan and did not realize that Lau was going to use fake arrest warrants to try to get Dalzell to confess. Fox also said he did not authorize police to sign his name to the document. According to these media reports, Fox also said he had no recollection of a conversation about a fake arrest warrant.

According to court documents, four investigators set out for Stanly, North Carolina. A Lincoln County deputy pulled Dalzell over, handcuffed him and placed him in the back of a Carrboro Police car along with the phony arrest warrant charging him with first degree murder. Lau read him a manufactured letter that was supposedly from Fox’s office saying Fox would seek the death penalty and there would be absolutely no plea deals unless Dalzell told them where he disposed of Debbie’s body

When Cpl. Everett walked in to the interview room to talk to Dalzell, the suspect broke down in tears, said he snapped and didn’t mean to do it; it just happened. At that point, the investigator told Dalzell to stop talking and presented Dalzell with a Miranda rights form. For the next five hours, police questioned Dalzell, who gave different versions of what happened.

During the interrogation, Dalzell hand-wrote two statements and typed one out on a computer. Dalzell was formally charged with second-degree murder.

A Trial

January 10, 2005. Orange County Superior Court Judge Wade Barber dropped Dalzell’s murder charges, claiming Dalzell’s statements were not made voluntarily. Barber also said officers “fabricated official court documents,” used deception and trickery and should have immediately informed Dalzell why he was being arrested, because the actual basis for the arrest was not clear.

Without a confession, the state did not have a case. Dalzell was released on $25,000 bail and his murder charges were suppressed.
In July, Dalzell was back in court to face child exploitation sex charges after allegedly trying to lure a child from Virginia over the Internet. Later that month, Carrboro charged Dalzell with six counts of third-degree sexual exploitation of a minor after investigators found pornographic images of teenagers on Dalzell’s computer.

Dalzell's attorney once again said the evidence was illegally obtained and that Carrboro police did not have probable cause when they took out a search warrant and seized items in his home. Once again, all charges were dropped.

It wasn’t at all the outcome law enforcement planned. Now they are left with a very strong suspect, but no body and the distinct possibility that the case will remain unsolved. Family and friends of Debbie have an endless list of unanswered questions.
What really happened to Deborah Key? Was she taken against her will or did she simply vanish? And where did law enforcement go wrong? Did a simple technicality cost them the arrest that could have solved this case? NC WANTED examines the case Saturday.

SLIDESHOWS

* VIEW PHOTOS: A Frustrating Investigation
* VIEW PHOTOS: Debbie Key


DOCUMENTS

* Chief's_Letter_to_Media_PAGE_ONE.pdf
* Chief's_Letter_to_Media_PAGE_TWO.pdf
* Fake_Letter_from_Carl_Fox.pdf
* Suspect_Sketch.pdf
* Dalzell_Warrant_3rd_degree_sex_exploitation.pdf


OTHER LINKS

* Report A Tip
* Join Mailing List


ON THE WEB

* Friends of Debbie Key


http://www.debbiekey.org/



http://www.ncwanted.com/ncwanted_home/story/2756162/

packy
04-19-2008, 10:12 AM
What a shame if he is the person responsible that they falsified information in this case.

sarahhod
02-05-2009, 05:36 AM
Murder Suspect Caught in Internet Sex Sting

By NC WANTED Staff
Posted: Feb. 4 10:28 a.m.
Updated: Feb. 4 11:09 a.m.


BUNCOMBE COUNTY — Andrew Dalzell, 32, a suspect in the 1997 disappearance of Debbie Key, was arrested in Asheville Tuesday for soliciting a child online.
According to Buncombe County authorities, Dalzell, of Gastonia, initiated a conversation in an Internet chat room with an undercover officer posing as an 11-year-old girl and began discussing sexual acts.
Dalzell traveled to Asheville to meet the young girl, but was met instead by investigators from the sheriff's office and State Bureau of Investigation.
He is being held under a $70,000 bond.
NC WANTED interviewed Dalzell last year about the disappearance of Debbie Key, a 35-year-old Chapel Hill woman, who left a bar with Dalzell 11 years ago and has never been seen or heard from since. To learn more, read the story below or browse the links in the gray sidebar at right.
_________________________
From Previous Reports:
ORANGE COUNTY: Call it an act of desperation. Call it a last resort. When the Carrboro Police Department drew up a fake letter and phony arrest warrant for the man suspected of murdering 35-year-old Deborah Key, they got what they were hoping for: a killer’s confession. But their backhanded tactics got the confession thrown out of court.

Now, 10 years later, they are sitting on square one.

November 30, 1997. Deborah Key went out to one of her favorite places, a local bar and pool hall off Main Street in Carrboro called Sticks and Stones.

That night, a 19-year-old man with a ponytail and backward baseball cap caught Debbie’s attention. It wasn’t his first time at the bar, but no one knew his name. Regulars called him “The Artist.” He would sit at the bar, sip on soda and sketch pictures of nude women.

Debbie was single and lived with her mother in Chapel Hill. She loved animals and children. She earned most of her money from babysitting jobs around town, and lived a nomadic lifestyle. She often would leave home for days at a time.

Friends say Debbie liked to drink. Investigators say she often would leave whatever bar she was at with anyone promising free alcohol.

That night, The Artist bought Debbie a few drinks and the two spent most of the night chatting and flirting inside the bar.

When the bar closed around 2:30 a.m., investigators said the bar owner saw Debbie and “The Artist” hugging and kissing in the parking lot next to the bar.

Two days later, one of Debbie’s friends called Debbie’s mother to tell her that Debbie’s Pontiac Sunbird was illegally parked in the lot beside Sticks and Stones. When Debbie’s mother arrived at the car, it was unlocked and Debbie’s purse was on the front seat.

“She’d put her purse in the trunk. She’d put her key in her pocket,” Debbie's friend Joy Presslar said. “So, when we heard that her car was unlocked and purse was on the front with her coat, we knew that she’d been taken against her will or that something had happened, because it was so out of character for her to leave her things like that.”

A Frustrating Investigation

The Carrboro Police Department and the State Bureau of Investigation began to gather information, immediately suspecting foul play. They have never give up hope that Debbie is still alive, they say, but they worked the case as a homicide from the start.

They processed Debbie’s car as a crime scene. But when they received the car, investigators say, it seemed that the car had been detailed. The possibility of gathering physical evidence had been lost.

“Any possible fingerprints, any hairs and fibers inside the car that would have been left by someone else besides Debbie would have been vacuumed up (in the cleaning),” said John Hawthorne, a former SBI agent.

Pressing forward, authorities worked to retrace Debbie’s steps the last night she was seen.

Based on eyewitness accounts, they developed and distributed a composite sketch of The Artist, but they continued to explore other avenues, interviewing anyone they could find who knew Debbie or was at the bar that night.

They hone in on two men, one of whom just finished serving a lengthy sentence for kidnapping and assaulting a woman. Although both men seem to be strong suspects, they both pass polygraph tests and are eliminated.

Months pass without any sign of Debbie or The Artist.

In March, the co-owner of Sticks and Stones spotted The Artist in Chapel Hill. Authorities arrived at the bar and saw the Artist in the parking lot.

The Artist

His name is Andrew Douglas Dalzell. Police asked whether he was the person seen standing with Debbie in the parking lot of Sticks and Stones in the early morning of December 1, 1997. At first he denied the allegations. But confronted with eyewitness accounts that put him with Debbie, he admitted it was him.

He refused to come in for questioning but said he would take a polygraph in the near future. By the next day, Dalzell got an attorney who advised that he not take a polygraph or submit to any interviews.

A month after identifying Dalzell, authorities obtained a warrant to search his car. They took the car to the SBI lab and their suspicions were immediately riled.

A huge blood stain on the backseat. A woman’s bra and underwear.

But it all comes back negative. The blood stain is from Dalzell’s injured dog and the hair and fibers they find don’t match Debbie.
All signs point to Dalzell, but with no physical evidence and no body, the case languishes – this time for years.

Honing In

September 2004. Dalzell contacted Carrboro Police seeking security assistance as he moves out of his apartment, because he feels threatened by a man who stole more than $1,000 worth of property from him.

While providing security protection for Dalzell, the investigator noticed some items around the house from a hobby store called Hungate’s where Dalzell used to work – some still with price tags on.

Authorities drew up an arrest warrant for obtaining property by false pretenses and identity theft. By this time, Dalzell and his girlfriend were living in Stanly with his girlfriend’s parents. Lt. John Lau devises a plan to get Dalzell to make a statement about Debbie’s disappearance and presumed murder.

Plan A

Neither Lau nor former district attorney, now-judge Carl Fox, would go on the record about what happened behind closed doors, but according to media reports and official court documents, Lau and Fox came up with a plan to get information out of Dalzell.

Lau told investigators to wait to serve the arrest warrants. In the meantime, police drew up a fake arrest warrant and fake letter from the district attorney’s office in hopes of getting Dalzell to make a statement.

Lau said Fox gave him a piece of his letterhead, wished him good luck and said, “You have nothing to lose.” But Carl Fox told the media that he had few details of the plan and did not realize that Lau was going to use fake arrest warrants to try to get Dalzell to confess. Fox also said he did not authorize police to sign his name to the document. According to these media reports, Fox also said he had no recollection of a conversation about a fake arrest warrant.

According to court documents, four investigators set out for Stanly, North Carolina. A Lincoln County deputy pulled Dalzell over, handcuffed him and placed him in the back of a Carrboro Police car along with the phony arrest warrant charging him with first degree murder. Lau read him a manufactured letter that was supposedly from Fox’s office saying Fox would seek the death penalty and there would be absolutely no plea deals unless Dalzell told them where he disposed of Debbie’s body

When Cpl. Everett walked in to the interview room to talk to Dalzell, the suspect broke down in tears, said he snapped and didn’t mean to do it; it just happened. At that point, the investigator told Dalzell to stop talking and presented Dalzell with a Miranda rights form. For the next five hours, police questioned Dalzell, who gave different versions of what happened.

During the interrogation, Dalzell hand-wrote two statements and typed one out on a computer. Dalzell was formally charged with second-degree murder.

A Trial

January 10, 2005. Orange County Superior Court Judge Wade Barber dropped Dalzell’s murder charges, claiming Dalzell’s statements were not made voluntarily. Barber also said officers “fabricated official court documents,” used deception and trickery and should have immediately informed Dalzell why he was being arrested, because the actual basis for the arrest was not clear.

Without a confession, the state did not have a case. Dalzell was released on $25,000 bail and his murder charges were suppressed.
In July, Dalzell was back in court to face child exploitation sex charges after allegedly trying to lure a child from Virginia over the Internet. Later that month, Carrboro charged Dalzell with six counts of third-degree sexual exploitation of a minor after investigators found pornographic images of teenagers on Dalzell’s computer. He was also charged with fraud after allegedly using a stolen credit card to buy a mail-order Russian bride.

Dalzell's attorney once again said the evidence was illegally obtained and that Carrboro police did not have probable cause when they took out a search warrant and seized items in his home. Once again, all charges were dropped.

It wasn’t at all the outcome law enforcement planned. Now they are left with a very strong suspect, but no body and the distinct possibility that the case will remain unsolved. Family and friends of Debbie have an endless list of unanswered questions.
What really happened to Deborah Key? Was she taken against her will or did she simply vanish? And where did law enforcement go wrong? Did a simple technicality cost them the arrest that could have solved this case?
If you have any information about the disappearance on Debbie Key, call NC WANTED toll free at 1.866.43.WANTED (1.866.439.2683) or click on "Report a Tip" (http://www.ncwanted.com/nc_wanted_root/page/1243336/) Your identity can be kept confidential.


ARRESTED: Andrew Dalzell
http://www.ncwanted.com/asset/2009/02/04/4465798/dalzell-arrest-510x191.jpg
Andrew Dalzell, 32, is a suspect in the 1997 disappeance of Debbie Key. Although he was arrested and confessed to her murder, he went free due to police errors. On February 3, 2009, however, he was arrested by Buncombe County sheriff's investigators for soliciting a child online.


http://www.ncwanted.com/ncwanted_home/story/4465792/

sarahhod
02-05-2009, 05:38 AM
Strange case: Gastonia man suspected in killing Chapel Hill woman now faces Internet sex charge in Asheville


February 3, 2009 - 9:56 PM
Kevin Ellis (kellis@gastongazette.com)


A Gastonia man who allegedly once confessed to killing a Chapel Hill woman, only to have prosecutors dismiss the murder charge after a judge ruled police illegally obtained that confession, faces a new charge in Buncombe County related to him allegedly soliciting sex over the Internet with a child.
Andrew Douglas Dalzell, 32, traveled to Buncombe County on Tuesday, where Sheriff's Office investigators arrested him at a house where Dalzell allegedly had arranged to meet a child for sex.
"He drove to Buncombe County today for the purpose of meeting an 11-year-old girl, but it was in fact an undercover officer," Buncombe County Sheriff's Office Lt. Ross Dillingham said Tuesday. "He was very surprised. He basically started making up stories of why he was in the area, but he had directions to where he thought the girl lived, which was actually our meeting place."
Dalzell was booked into the Buncombe County Jail under a $70,000 bond.
A detective had been chatting with Dalzell off and on for the past several months, Dillingham said, and those Internet conversations turned sexual in nature. The Buncombe County Sheriff's Office has a detective who works with the state's Internet Crimes Against Nature Task Force, and last year the office made 18 such arrests, Dillingham said.
But Dalzell also has a history. In the early morning hours of Dec. 1, 1997, Dalzell and Deborah Leigh Key were seen together outside Sticks & Stones, a pool hall that once was on Main Street in Carrboro, according to news accounts.
Key has not been seen since and police suspect foul play contributed to her disappearance.
Police first became interested in Dalzell as a suspect in March 1998, according to news accounts. He was known as "The Artist" because he would sit in the bar and sketch drawings of nude women, but other than him being seen with Key police had no other physical evidence and the case languished for years.
In September 2004, Dalzell asked the Carrboro Police to provide security for him as he moved because he was scared of a neighbor accused of stealing from him. While police were at Dalzell's home, an officer noticed items supposedly stolen from a hobby store where Dalzell once worked, some of them with price tags still attached, according to news accounts.
By this time, Dalzell was reportedly living in Stanley with a girlfriend. He now lives on Eighth Avenue in Gastonia with his wife, said his mother, Juanita Mullen of Pittsboro.
Carrboro Police allegedly hatched a plan to produce a fake murder warrant and letter from the prosecutor stating that there would be no plea offered and that the office would seek the death penalty unless Dalzell told officers where to find Key's body. Police in fact only had a warrant for Dalzell's arrest on a theft charge. He was picked up by a Lincoln County Sheriff's Office deputy and taken back to Carrboro, according to news accounts.
Before going to trial, a judge ruled that Carrboro Police illegally obtained the confession, disallowing it as evidence.
Six months later, in June 2005, Orange County District Attorney Jim Woodall dismissed the murder charge against Dalzell, stating the confession was his primary evidence, according to news accounts.
Because the second-degree murder charge was dismissed before a jury was empanelled, prosecutors could bring the same charge against Dalzell again if different evidence emerged, according to news accounts.
A message left at Dalzell's residence in Gastonia was not immediately returned.
Dalzell has maintained that he was threatened into confessing and only did so because he was scared.
Dalzell's mother stands by her son on the accusation of murder.
"The boy couldn't keep his room cleaned, much less his car, and those police went through his car and didn't find anything," Mullen said.
Dalzell also faced accusations of sexual exploitation of a child at the time he was charged with second-degree murder in the Key case. Those charges were dismissed because police illegally seized his computer, said his mother. She said she warned him then that police would be looking for him to make a mistake.
"It upsets me. It appalls me," Mullen said. "I've been wondering for some time if he has a borderline personality disorder."
"I can't defend this latest stunt," she said, "but the way he was treated in Orange County and the wrong information they used on him wrecked his life."


http://www.gastongazette.com/news/county_30091___article.html/dalzell_buncombe.html

sarahhod
02-05-2009, 05:39 AM
Undercover Sting Arrest

Detectives say a man who confessed to murder, but later had the charges against him dropped, came to the mountains to have sex with an 11 year old girl.

Deputies arrested 32 year old Andrew Dalzell today in Buncombe County. An undercover deputy had been chatting with him online for months, and they made an arrangement for him to come from Gastonia to meet what he thought was an 11 year old girl for sex.

Officials say it raised the bar for them to know he was previously accused of murder. Dalzell faced a second degree murder charge in the 1997 disappearance of Deborah Key in Carrboro.

Her body was never found, but police say in 2004 Dalzell admitted strangling Key and dumping her body in Wilmington. A judge dropped the charge in 2005, saying police used a fake arrest warrant and letter from the D.A. stating he'd seek the death penalty to draw the confession.

Dalzell is currently being held in the Buncombe County Detention Center charged with soliciting a child by computer. His bond was set at $70,000.

http://www.wlos.com/shared/newsroom/top_stories/wlos_vid_2079.shtml

sarahhod
02-05-2009, 05:41 AM
Did Gastonia man charged with Internet sex crime get away with murder?


February 4, 2009 - 9:10 PM

http://images.onset.freedom.com/gaston/medium/kekm17-debbiekey.jpg (http://www.gastongazette.com/sections/article/gallery?pic=1&id=30138&db=gaston)
Debbie Key

http://images.onset.freedom.com/gaston/medium/kekm18-1amugcolorandrewdalzell.jpg (http://www.gastongazette.com/sections/article/gallery?pic=2&id=30138&db=gaston)
Andrew Dalzell

For the past several years Andrew Douglas Dalzell has stayed under the radar living first in Stanley and then in Gastonia with his wife on East Eighth Avenue.
But the 32-year-old man's arrest Tuesday in Buncombe County on a charge of soliciting sex over the Internet with a child not only brought that incident to light, but also a past that includes a suspicion of murder.
Police have suspected Dalzell in the slaying of Deborah Leigh Key ever since she disappeared from outside a Carrboro pool hall on Dec. 1, 1997. Witnesses report that Dalzell was the last person to see Key in the early morning hours after the bar had closed.
"Certainly, without a doubt," answered Carrboro Lt. John Lau when asked if he still feels Dalzell killed Key. "He confessed."
But a judge threw out that 2004 confession after finding out Carrboro police tricked Dalzell into thinking he'd already been charged with murder in Key's death. In fact, the warrant and a letter from the former Orange County prosecutor were fake, and Dalzell only faced a theft charge.
Lau was the lead detective in the case and was present when Dalzell confessed to the crime. The prosecutor would dismiss charges in 2005, saying the confession was his primary evidence in the case.
Dalzell maintains that Carrboro police threatened him into confessing to a killing he did not commit.
A man who answered Dalzell's home telephone Wednesday and identified himself as the man's father-in-law declined to comment. He also said his daughter would not comment.
But Dalzell's mother, Juanita Mullen of Pittsboro, remembers those days when her son was under suspicion for murder for years before he was formally charged.
Dalzell was a 20-year-old high school dropout who suffered from attention deficit disorder and other learning disabilities, although he would get his GED, said Mullen, who adopted her son at 10 weeks old.
Police still have not found Key's body nor any physical evidence linking Dalzell to her, said his mother.
"The boy couldn't keep his room cleaned, much less his car, and those police went through his car and didn't find anything," Mullen said.
"I can't defend this latest stunt, but the way he was treated in Orange County and the wrong information they used against him wrecked his life," she said.
Dalzell didn't work and relied on financial support from his mother and wife, Mullen said.
"He can't get a job because of the publicity," Mullen said. "The minute someone goes online and looks up his name he doesn't have a chance."
Buncombe County Sheriff's investigators say Dalzell had been conversing over the Internet for the past several months with someone he thought was an 11-year-old girl. On Tuesday, Dalzell left Gastonia to drive to a house in Buncombe County, where he thought he would meet up with the girl for sex.
Instead, Dalzell met a detective. He was booked into Buncombe County Jail in Asheville under a $70,000 bond.
"It upsets me and appalls me," said his mother. "I've been wondering for some time if he has a borderline personality disorder."
Dalzell also faces Internet sex charges involving a child at the time of his arrest in the Key killing. Those charges also would be dismissed.
"People who do this generally don't stop until they're forced to stop," Lt. Lau said.
At this point, Carrboro police have no plans to interview Dalzell again about the Key slaying.
"The case is still open," Lau said.
Bill Widman was a friend of Key and maintains a Web site devoted to keeping attention on her unsolved slaying.
Key was "happy-go-lucky" and a "free spirit" who had many wonderful qualities, Widman said, but she also tended to drink too much.
"She thought everybody was good. She didn't think anybody would ever hurt her," Widman said.
Widman also thinks Dalzell has so far gotten away with murder, and while he should have been trying to stay out of trouble he couldn't help himself.
"This guy is kind of dumb and kind of smart," Widman said. "Smart enough not to get caught and dumb enough to put himself in situations like this."

http://www.gastongazette.com/news/dalzell_30138___article.html/key_police.html

sarahhod
02-05-2009, 05:42 AM
Man charged with soliciting sex over Internet

Staff Reports • published February 4, 2009 12:15 am

ASHEVILLE – Authorities Tuesday arrested a Gastonia man and charged him with soliciting sex from an underage girl over the Internet.
Buncombe County sheriff's investigators and the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force started an undercover investigation several months ago, according to a news release from the Sheriff's Office. The suspect started a conversation in an Internet chat room with what he thought was an 11-year-old girl, but was actually an undercover officer. The chats turned sexual in nature.
The man drove from Gastonia to Buncombe County to carry out sex acts, the Sheriff's Office said. When he arrived at the meeting place, he was arrested.
Andrew Douglas Dalzell, 32, was charged with solicitation of a child by computer. His bond was set at $70,000.

http://www.citizen-times.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2009902040319

packy
02-05-2009, 07:43 AM
Maybe they should quit lying to people to get them to confess and try some different tactics. If this man was involved in Debbie's disappearance they may not be able to bring him to trial because of the controversy.