Saw this on Reddit and it made me sick - I've never heard of the case. It should be better known than it is.
"Janet Chandler, a 22-year-old woman, was found deceased on Feb. 1, 1979. A snowplow driver found her nude body buried in the snow near a wooded area. She was completely buried in the snow except for her arm, which jutted out of the snow in an unsettling manner.
Janet had been raped, anally and vaginally. Her cause of death was strangulation, and there were bruises over her wrists which indicated that she’d been handcuffed for a prolonged period of time. Adhesive consistent with duct-tape was found all over her face, suggesting that she’d been gagged and blindfolded.
At the time of her murder, Janet had been living in Ottawa County, MI. Specifically, she was living in the city of Holland, which at the time was undergoing some turmoil. A company called Chemetron had a paint plant in Holland, but the workers had gone on strike and the situation was getting ugly. Chemetron hired a security company called Wackenhut to provide additional security during the strike.
Wackenhut brought in security personnel from throughout the country to guard the Chemetron plant during the strike. Most of those personnel ended up being housed at the Blue Mill Inn, where Janet Chandler worked as a night clerk. Around 80 security guards from Wackenhut were living at the Blue Mill Inn at the time that Janet was working there.
Janet herself lived in an apartment with Laurie Swank, her boss at the Blue Mill Inn. Janet considered Laurie to be her best friend.
The Wackenhut guards were known as rough guys that liked to party, and it was common for motel staff to hook up with them. Both Janet Chandler and Laurie Swank indulged in numerous affairs with various guards. In fact, Swank once had to reprimand Janet for having sex in a motel room at the Blue Mill Inn which was meant to be a display suite.
Janet was studying music at Hope College, a private Christian liberal arts school in Holland, Michigan. Janet came from a conservative Christian family, and she was devoutly religious. Before moving into her own apartment, she’d lived a very sheltered life. For example, her parents would not let her sleepover at any friend’s house if the friend’s parents even drank alcohol.
Her teachers at Hope College described her as an emotionally sensitive person who would often burst into tears if she was criticized. Janet seemed too sheltered for her own good.
Janet mostly inherited her parent’s religious views, and her journals are filled with musings of a religious nature. For example, the last journal entry before her death contained the question: “When was Paul saved? When the Lord spoke to him to go? Or when he obeyed God and went?”