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Technology, persistence lead to murder arrest

North Las Vegas man held in 1997 slaying at Las Vegas bar

Annie Bunnell never gave up.

After her 69-year-old husband was found stabbed to death at a Las Vegas bar in 1997, she began calling police to ask if there were any new leads or evidence.


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  • She kept making calls, encouraging police to work hard to bring the killer to justice.

    On Tuesday she saw her persistence pay off.

    That's when Las Vegas police arrested 48-year-old Craig Lombardo at his North Las Vegas apartment in connection with the 11-year-old slaying of Duke Bunnell.

    The arrest was aided by forensic technology unavailable during the time of the crime, and a crucial piece of evidence that was overlooked in the initial investigation.

    "Maybe now he can rest in peace," the 78-year-old Bunnell said. "People always say you have closure, but I will never have closure. He was so dear to me and then this idiot came along and killed him. ... I have more choice words for him, but I'm trying to be a lady."

    Lombardo was booked into the Clark County Detention Center on charges of murder with a deadly weapon and robbery with a deadly weapon.

    Co-workers found Bunnell's body at what was then Rob Roy's bar, 2797 S. Maryland Parkway, near Sahara Avenue, on the morning of July 10, 1997. Bunnell worked at the bar as a bookkeeper.

    Investigators said Bunnell lost a dramatic struggle to survive. The original police report likened the crime scene to a "slaughterhouse."

    "Blood was pooled all over the floor," the report said. "Blood spatter was on all four walls up to five feet off the floor."

    Bunnell, a Pennsylvania native, lived in the valley for about six years and didn't need the job, his colleagues and his wife said. Annie Bunnell said her husband also worked as a real estate agent before his death.

    Police suspected robbery was the motive. They found an open cash register and file cabinet used to safeguard money. There were no signs of pry marks on the register or cabinet. If money was missing, it was a minimal amount. Police said 121 one-dollar tokens used for the video poker machines were taken. There were no signs of a break-in at the bar, and a rear door to the building was unlocked.

    Police believed the slaying took place between 6:30 a.m. and 8 a.m., Bunnell's typical work hours. Co-workers found Bunnell's body about 9:30 a.m.

    From nearly the get-go, investigators had their sights set on Rob Roy's kitchen worker Lombardo, then 37 years old, police Detective David Culver said. Culver said Lombardo was interviewed the afternoon of the homicide.

    He became a "person of interest" because he never showed up to his shift at 10 the morning of the slaying. When police spoke with him, he couldn't account for his whereabouts that morning. He also had visible injuries on his hands and arms, Culver said.

    Police gave Lombardo a Hemastix test, which determined that he had primate blood -- humans are primates -- under his fingernails. Culver said the Hemastix at the time was considered a sophisticated test used by police in homicides. But it wasn't sophisticated enough in 1997 to determine whether the blood positively matched Bunnell's blood.

    "They decided not to arrest him (Lombardo) at the time," Culver said. "I don't know if they felt it wasn't enough to get a conviction beyond a reasonable doubt."

    Culver reopened the case on Oct. 22, 2007, after a volunteer in the cold case section came forward on behalf of Bunnell's wife and asked Culver if there was anything that could be done to solve the crime. Annie Bunnell had been calling police every other month since the homicide occurred asking about any developments in the investigation.

    "She deserves all the credit for having the case reopened," Culver said.

    He said police got a break in January when they noticed a previously overlooked fingerprint collected from the crime scene was somehow mixed in with samples of footprint evidence.

    They were able to identify the print as belonging to Lombardo's left ring finger, which was located next to droplets of Bunnell's blood.

    In the spring, police were able to determine that Lombardo's blood was mixed with Bunnell's blood in a sink inside the bar. He said the blood from the sink wasn't tested back in 1997, but it most likely wouldn't have determined that the blood belonged to two people because technology was not as advanced as it is today.

    "Today, we could get two DNA profiles using much smaller samples of blood," he said. "This case was solved through time and technology from then until now."

    Homicide Lt. Lew Roberts said his agency has investigated 12 to 30 cold cases a year for the past two years, solving a handful each year. It has more than 1,100 unsolved homicide files dating back to 1943.

    Roberts said he and Culver drove to Apple Valley, Calif., last month to visit with Bunnell's widow. They told her they expected to make an arrest soon. He said police typically try to meet families of cold case victims they are investigating in order to become more than just a voice behind a desk phone.

    "More often than not, I call and talk to the families and let them know what we're doing," he said. "Sometimes, I have to be honest with them and tell them we've done everything we could and hadn't found anything."

    Roberts said that when he and Culver spoke with Bunnell's widow, she was so moved, she cried.

    "She felt good we were actually looking at the case and it hadn't gone by the wayside," he said.

    Annie Bunnell applauded police officers' efforts Tuesday.

    She left Las Vegas only three weeks after her husband's slaying, relocating to California where she had family and friends.

    She said she hasn't thought about re-marrying after her husband's death, and not a day goes by when she doesn't think of him.

    "He was always there for me," she said about the man she had been married to for 36 years. "Every day we'd sit down and talk. Now I don't have that anymore ... I miss him."

    Contact reporter Antonio Planas at aplanas@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-4638.

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    Report abuse

    aa wrote on January 13, 2009 08:35 PM: To - not important Why dont you call the detective and tell him what your "personal interest" is?


    Report abuse

    Ron Smilow wrote on July 21, 2008 11:01 AM: the Belgiums got the Bud, but this one's
    for you Annie!! Finnally!!! all of us were
    praying and hoping this day would come. No one could ever forget one of the sweetest guys!!! Much Love, Ron


    Report abuse

    not important wrote on July 19, 2008 09:54 PM: I am deeply saddened by the loss of life to the bunnell family. I have a personal interest in seeing the suspect brought to justice and hope he receives justice to the full extent that the law can provide.


    Report abuse

    Bryan Hardin wrote on July 17, 2008 10:24 AM: Congratulations to Annie Bunnell and Detective Culver on a job well done. Three JEERS however to the original detectives assigned to the case back in 1997. A Craig S. Lombardo was convicted in 1992 for “armed robbery” in Clark County. It may be the same person and it may not.
    Bryan Hardin
    Corpus Christi, TX.


    Report abuse

    Mark Plummer wrote on July 17, 2008 06:42 AM: Mr. Bengimina, I thought you disappeared! You need to email me, jsreich@hotmail.com would love to catch up. I too worked with Duke, at both the Paradise location and Maryland pkwy location of Jerome's. Not a month has gone by that I don't think of Duke and what an honorable man he was. This is such a huge victory for Annie! All of the old Jerome's crew always knew it was someone who worked with Duke and were amazed none of us were ever contacted or interviewed. Duke would never open the door for anyone he didn't know before the restaurant opened. The attempt to blame this on lack of technology is sad. O.J. was years before this and they had no problem separating everyone's blood. The fact is the LVPD didn't want to spend the money on this case. Thank God Annie never gave up and Duke finally has some justice. Enjoy prison Lombardo. I hope a similar fate awaits you. All my best Annie, your in my thoughts and prayers. Mark Plummer San Antonio TX.


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    John Bengimina wrote on July 16, 2008 04:08 PM: ("No BS" you are 100% correct, and I am still laughing.) Annie, God bless you. Duke was with out a doubt one of the finest Gentleman I have ever known. He taught me many things in the few years I worked with him at JEROME'S on Paradise at Harmon. No doubt this is what many of us have prayed for, but make NO mistake it was Annie who never quit. The Police should be ashamed of their lack of attention to DETAIL. This case should have been solve the day of the murder. TECHNOLOGY would have had nothing to do with it, if they would have done their JOB. This would also include the detectives supervisors. All my love Annie. J. BENGIMINA


    Report abuse

    No BS wrote on July 16, 2008 08:43 AM: Free Nevada, you clearly as a conspiracy theory nut. Good thing for yo that the new X-Files movie is coming out soon. You clearly are an idiot of the highest degree.


    Report abuse

    tozzcat wrote on July 16, 2008 08:28 AM: Great to see these old cases do get resolved from time to time.


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    rb wrote on July 16, 2008 07:45 AM: Duke Bunnell was my uncle and it is great to see this resolved after so many years. I moved to Northern Nevada to attend UNR in 1964. Duke moved to southern California after service in Korea. CSI and Cold Case are a great TV programs, but 11 years and technology break changes are more realistic than all solved in an hour. Thanks to all involved for the diligence to resolve this. Annie is a special lady. Too bad my mother died before finding out the murder of her little brother had been resolved. I know it bother her.
    Ray Bacon, Minden, NV


    Report abuse

    Free Nevada wrote on July 16, 2008 06:27 AM: If the suspect worked with the victim, that could explain his fingerprints being at their work and if Lombardo was a kitchen worker, that could explain marks on his hands and possibly his own blood under his fingernails. It seems if victim's blood was splashed 5 feet up walls, there would have been more evidence on Lombardo and at his house, etc., even if the evidence was just recent laundry or bleaching. If post-2000 DNA technology proves their blood was mixed in an area near the murder, that's a conviction. So it all hinges on integrity of the blood samples and the recent testing to ensure there is no frame up going on to quiet the widow.


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