Digging in Gacy's crawl space
F or several weeks in the winter of 1978, Al Kulovitz lived by myself performance SA. Leaving his place in Frankfurt condominium early. Emergence of a brick house farm unincorporated Norwood Park Township to the northwest suburbs. Negligence in overalls and rubber boots. Get on hands and knees and shimmy his 6 feet, 7 inches to build a crawl space dirt. Digging of entry into force for the bodies of pink behind by John Wayne Gacy.
"You have to know the difference between a bone and a Dumfounder after a while," he said. "After the first night or two, my forearms got so painful I could barely turn a doorknob."
Kulovitz is an evidence technician at retirement to the sheriff of Cook County supervise a member of a unit that originally pioneered the application field forensic crime scenes. They were the first "CSI" in the Chicago area.
For those weeks chilly little over 30 years, the job meant digging into the port of Gacy, looking for human remains little more than hands and garden tools. When Kulovitz and his colleagues have been completed, 29 bodies were discovered on the value.






