The convicted felon who
killed the University of Utah senior who had broken up with him — before
killing himself hours later — went on a date with another woman 18 minutes
after he dragged his 21-year-old ex to a car, shot her multiple times and left
her for dead, authorities revealed.
“I can’t fathom how anybody
with a conscience could murder their girlfriend and then go have dinner with
somebody else and act like nothing happened,” University of Utah Police Chief
Dale Brophy said at a press conference Thursday.
“That’s probably one of the
most disturbing details of this case for me,” he said. “It takes a real special
piece of work to do that.”
Lauren McCluskey, a
communications major and track star from Pullman, Washington, broke up with
Melvin Rowland, 37, on Oct. 9 after she learned about his criminal past as a
sex offender and that he had lied to her about his name and age.
Rowland spent ten years in
prison after he was convicted of attempted forcible sex abuse and enticing a
minor over the internet in 2004, Brophy said.
On Thursday, Brophy
revealed chilling new details about what happened in the two weeks leading up
to McCluskey’s death. He said Rowland had extorted $1,000 from her by
threatening to post compromising photos of them on the internet. Brophy also
revealed that on the day Rowland killed McCluskey, he lay in wait for her, even
convincing her friends to let him hang out inside her dorm while silently
stalking her.
“He was very, very good at
getting people to trust him and Lauren was no different,” Brophy said.
Eighteen
minutes after Rowland killed McCluskey, he called a woman he’d met online days
earlier, asking her to pick him up in the same parking lot where he’d just
murdered his ex-girlfriend, Brophy said.
“He asked her for a ride,
saying he had just finished a workout at the university,” the chief said. “They
went to dinner at a local restaurant, drove by the state capitol and then they
went to her home in downtown Salt Lake City where Rowland took a shower.”
After dropping him off at a
coffee shop downtown, the woman saw news reports about the shooting and
contacted the police, Brophy said.
Saying that Rowland had
also “duped” this woman, he added, “He was a manipulator. If his lips were
moving, he was lying. I don’t think he told the truth to anyone.”
University to Review Campus
Police
Brophy addressed questions
about why the department didn’t reach out to Rowland’s parole officers after
McCluskey went to police with concerns he was harassing her in the weeks before
her death, saying university police weren’t aware he was on probation when they
began looking into the complaint.
Since this was initially an
extortion case, he said investigators wanted to make contact with Rowland first
before notifying his parole officers.
“We didn’t want to lose any
evidence before identifying any of our suspects,” he said. “We did not believe
there was enough evidence at the time to contact other law enforcement
offices.”
Released from prison in
April, Rowland was on supervised parole, Utah Department of Corrections Public
Information Officer Kaitlin Felsted tells PEOPLE.
Parolees are required to
stay out of trouble during their probationary period and can be sent back to prison
for parole violations, new arrests and even allegations of criminal offenses,
depending on the severity of the accusation.
The university will conduct
two independent reviews into the actions of the campus police department and
campus safety, University President Ruth Watkins said.
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