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John Albert Gardner III (born April 9, 1979) is an American convicted double murderer, rapist, and child molester. [1] He confessed to the February 2009 rape and murder of 14-year-old Amber Dubois from Escondido, California, [2] [3] [4] and the February 2010 rape and murder of 17-year-old Chelsea King from Poway, California, after he entered a plea agreement that spared him from execution.
[7] [8] After successfully challenging her detention at a Mental Health Review Tribunal and being released, de Freitas began living alone with support from her parents and working part-time in a branch of The Body Shop on King's Road in Chelsea. [6] Unbeknown to her parents, she reportedly also worked as a tantric masseuse and escort.
Dandie Fashions opened its shop at 161 King's Road, Chelsea in October 1966. Prior to this, John Crittle had worked for Michael Rainey in his boutique Hung On You. Crittle and Tara Browne wanted to create a retail outlet for their new tailoring company, Foster and Tara.
Roberts bought the lease to the King's Road boutique, at number 430, in 1969 from Michael Rainey, who had owned another boutique with a cult following at that location, Hung On You. At Myles' suggestion, Roberts named the shop after the 1969 William Klein film Mr. Freedom , which was a spoof of the anti-war movement.
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Lost Girls is a 2012 non-fiction book by the American-Canadian author and journalist Caitlin Rother about the rape and murder of teenage girls Amber Dubois in 2009 and Chelsea King in 2010 at the hands of John Albert Gardner. It was published in July 2012 by Kensington Books. It was the author's eighth book.
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The King's Head and Eight Bells is a Grade II listed former public house at 50 Cheyne Walk, Chelsea, London SW3, United Kingdom. [1] It was built in the early 19th century. [1] It is now a restaurant, the Cheyne Walk Brasserie. [2] The King's Head and Eight Bells was Dylan Thomas's favourite pub in the early 1940s during the second world war. [3]