Autopsies: Women found in Ohio home were strangled

By Meghan Barr and Thomas J. Sheeran

Associated Press

Published: Friday, April 2 2010 9:11 a.m. MDT

CLEVELAND — The women who vanished into Cleveland's house of death were strangled by commonplace objects that were never intended for killing.

A green belt with a metal buckle. The strap of a shoulder bag. An electrical charger for a cell phone or camera. A knotted piece of cloth.

Yet these are what silenced most of the 11 women unearthed last fall at the home of Anthony Sowell, a registered sex offender who has pleaded not guilty to an 85-count indictment in their deaths. Many still had the ligatures wrapped around their necks.

Autopsy reports obtained Thursday by The Associated Press revealed that eight of the women were strangled, most with household objects. Nine had traces of cocaine or depressants in their systems.

The reports offer the first comprehensive look at the horrors the women may have endured.

One woman's body, found in the basement under a mound of dirt, was nude and gagged at the mouth with her shirt tied behind her head. Most were bound at the wrists or ankles with shoelaces, cable wire and rope. Many were barely clothed. Four were nude from the waist down.

They were disposed of in garbage bags and plastic sheets, then dumped in various parts of the house and yard. Five were buried in the backyard. Four ended up on the third floor, one of them draped in a cloth comforter and plastic, still wearing a medallion in the shape of a cross around her neck.

Another was buried in the backyard in clear plastic, alongside three small paper bags and a manila envelope containing mud and items identified as possible human bones.

Two of the bodies were so badly decomposed that the county coroner could not determine exactly how they died, listing the cause of death as homicidal violence.

The autopsy on the 11th victim hasn't been completed because only her skull remained. Some of the victims may have been strangled by hand, said Dr. Frank Miller, the Cuyahoga County coroner.

Sowell has pleaded not guilty to killing the women and hiding their remains in and around his home in an impoverished neighborhood filled with abandoned homes. For months, a terrible smell of death wafted down the street where Sowell lived, but it was blamed on a sausage factory next door to his house.

Since the bodies were found in November, he has been charged with attacking five other women who survived.

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