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Norman W. Resol was
born on September 8, 1972, to David and Linda Resol of Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania. Norm's father,
David, was a laid-off steel worker collecting unemployment. His mother,
Linda, worked nights as a topless dancer. Norm was watched by a loose
coalition of neighbors. In 1974, the
family packed their bags and headed north towards the promise of
great jobs in the automotive business. The tip proved to be a little
out of date, and the Resols left Detroit after only seventeen days.
Linda continued
to support the family by dancing in clubs while David worked odd
jobs, but ends never met. The family moved frequently during the
next ten years, staying in one place only until the bill collectors
turned ugly. These moves took their toll on Norm's education, and
he fell more and more behind in the basic skills as he was yanked
in and out of school. With no friends,
neighbors, or family to watch Norm, Linda frequently took him to
work with her.
In the mid-eighties,
the family's situation improved when David landed a position loading
trucks for a booming defense contractor. The family moved again,
purchased their first home -- a doublewide trailer.
Norm's middle
school years were extremely tough. He showed little interest in
schoolwork, defied authority, and could not deal with the discipline
of athletics. He did, however, have an interest in girls, especially
those who were physically precocious. When these girls seldom gave
him what he wanted, he grew frustrated and was known to threaten
them. Norm also found that by using his fists he could intimidate
the other boys. Even though he was shorter and scrawnier than most
of the boys his age, Norm bullied, badgered, and fought his way
to a "young tough" reputation. He took up smoking, drinking,
and learned to shoot pool. Given the number of times Norm was suspended
from school, his attendance record showed him out of school as much
as he was in.
Norm's father's
borderline ways soon led to a plan that looked great on a paper
napkin. David schemed that he would steal a case of hammers from
the back of a truck, fudge the shipping manifest, and then sell
the tools on the black market. There were ten hammers to a case
and the defense contractor was charging the government a thousand
dollars per hammer.
David told both
his beer drinking buddies and Linda that he was a taxpayer. He paid
for those hammers. David said that, in a way, he wasn't even stealing.
He was reclaiming his own property.
The security
guard who caught David leaving the premises with ten hammers tucked
into the back of his pants disagreed. David didn't have any better
luck convincing the arresting officer, the jury, or the judge that
he hadn't done anything wrong either. David went to prison. Linda
headed south to Mississippi with her son.
Norm learned
from his father's mistakes. He only stole items that easily fit
in his pockets. It took him several years to perfect his technique,
though. Between shoplifting charges, underage drinking charges,
and assault charges, Norm became a regular in juvenile court and
spent most of his teen years on probation.
As Linda grew
older and less able to find work at dance clubs, she turned to low
paying waitress jobs and to selling herself outright to "gentlemen
callers," most of whom were not gentlemen. Norm was exposed
to all this, and more than once, the young man was knocked around by
one of Linda's "clients" who just didn't like the way
teenage Norm looked at him.
Norm graduated
from shoplifting to petty theft and burglary. He grew to know the
fastest route to every shady pawnshop and flea market within 150
miles. Electronics, car stereos, and jewelry went to the pawnshops.
At the flea markets, Norm would sell a dealer garbage bags full
of clothes, shoes, and other personal items. Some of these dealers
noticed that Norm provided them with many sets of women's shoes,
underwear, and lingerie. However, they asked no questions.
The cops
had their eye on Norm, but could never definitively connect him
with a specific crime.
With either
no or dysfunctional models for a relationship, Norm had no girl
friends or romantic interests that lasted more than a few months.
Norm normally found companionship in drunken one-night stands or
with street "working girls."
Norm's 20s
were a string of jail terms for minor offenses. Plea bargains, overcrowded
prisons offering time off for time served or good behavior, and
the low priority that solving crimes against property received kept
any of Norm's terms from being extensive.
One week after
his 1998 jail stint for passing bad checks, Norm and decided to celebrate by bringing a
bottle of champagne to a woman who worked behind the counter at
one of his favorite pawnshops.
The evening
did not go well for Norm, who decided that when the woman said "no,"
she really meant, "yes" and that after drinking his champagne
she didn't have a right to say no anyway. Norm's court-appointed
attorney negotiated a deal with the prosecutor
and Norm pled guilty to sexual battery, which sent him to a state
penitentiary instead of a county jail for the first time. In prison, he received an education from other
convicts on many things including the best way to stalk his victims. When Norm was
released, he was required to register as a sex offender.
Norm first found work cleaning a local church through the
church's program that transitioned released inmates back to society.
An economic downturn forced the church to cut
Norm's hours, but he stayed and supplemented his income by working
at Kevin Travers' photography studio. That's where he first met Barbara Dubois. Norm
became the president of the one-member Barbara Dubois Fan Club and
mailed her a five dollar bill to help her achieve her goals. Susan
Dubois, Barbara's mother, investigated Norm and complained to
Travers about him. Shortly thereafter, Travers let Norm go.
At the church, Norm was fired nine weeks after he was found peeking into the women's
restroom through a hole in the wall.
Two weeks later,
Norm was hired as the night shift custodian at the Yoknapatawpha County
Conference Center. He included his prison record on the application,
but also provided a recommendation from church officials.
At YCCC, Norm's
personnel record is clean. He shows up on time, completes his scheduled
work, and rarely calls in sick. He keeps to himself, has no friends.
He has twice been seen taking an exceptionally long time to clean
up around the pool area when women are relaxing in the area. Two
female guests complained that Norm made them feel "creepy,"
but had no specific charges. Co-workers have gossiped that he both
drinks and sleeps on duty and tends to leave closets and doors that
should be locked, unlocked. Management is aware of that
scuttlebutt but has not felt it was serious enough that they should
assign someone to check
on Norm at night. To date, nothing has been found missing.
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