BBC News Online: World: Americas


Front Page | World | UK | UK Politics | Business | Sci/Tech | Health | Education | Sport | Entertainment | Talking Point | High Graphics | Feedback | Help | Noticias | Newyddion |
Friday, July 30, 1999 Published at 18:08 GMT 19:08 UK

Barton: Trader turned mass murderer


Barton: Trader turned mass murderer
Mark Barton, the 44-year-old former chemist turned day trader, was known to police before he began his killing spree in Atlanta on Thursday.

Murder in Atlanta
In 1993, Barton was the prime suspect, although never officially charged with the murder of his first wife and mother-in-law.

Debra Spivey Barton, 36, and her mother, Eloise, 59, both of Lithia Springs, Georgia, were found in their camper van on 5 September 1993.

They were spending the Labour Day weekend at a lake in north-east Alabama.

The two women were found hacked to death with a sharp, heavy blade at the Riverside Campground in northeast Alabama.

The camper in which they were staying showed no signs of a forced entry, leading detectives to the conclusion that the murderer was known to the pair.

"He was the Number 1 suspect all the way through and still is," said Richard Igou, district attorney at the time of the killings.

Barton's father-in-law, Bill Spivey, said at the time: "Until the murders, Mark was the perfect son-in-law," adding, "since then, we have cooled tremendously toward each other."

Change of career

Some six years later and Barton had given up his career as a chemist and worked as a day trader - the practice of buying and selling shares with a quick turnaround, gambling on the movements of the stock market.


[ image: width=150]

Some of his trading was done through the All-Tech Investment Group's offices in Atlanta's northern Buckhead financial district.

There has been speculation that Barton's killing spree, which claimed the lives of nine people in Buckhead, may have been a sudden response to trading losses brought about by massive stock market fall on Thursday.

But Atlanta Mayor Bill Campbell said he thought the ups and downs of Wall Street were not to blame.

"Remember, there is at least some indication that there were fatalities ... that occurred before today," he said.

"So I think this clearly is a deranged individual."

Quiet churchgoer

Barton had lived in nearby Morrow for about a year, renting a two-story house in the modestly priced residential area.

Neighbours knew him as a quiet, churchgoing man, always working at his computer. Some described him as "preoccupied", others as "odd", a man who kept to himself.

He had married again but split with up with Lee Ann Barton earlier this year. Barton's two children, Michelle, 7, and Matthew, 12, moved with their stepmother to Stockbridge but Mrs Barton remained active in the local Scouts and was expected in Morrow on for an outing on Wednesday.

She never turned up.


Americas Contents

Country profiles

Relevant Stories

What is day trading? (29 Jul 99 | The Economy)
US gun law in firing line (15 May 99 | Americas)
Inflation fears spark market sell-off (29 Jul 99 | The Economy)

Internet Links

Atlanta Police Department

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

In this section

Microsoft trial mediator appointed (From Business)
Safety chief deplores crash speculation
Taxman scoops a million (From Entertainment)
Violence greets Clinton visit
Bush outlines foreign policy
Boy held after US school shooting
Memorial for bonfire dead
Senate passes US budget
New constitution for Venezuela
North Korea expels US 'spy'
Hurricane Lenny abates
UN welcomes US paying dues
Chavez praises 'advanced' constitution
In pictures: Castro strikes out Chavez
WTO: arbitration in EU-Ecuador banana dispute
Colombian army chief says rebels defeated
Colombian president lambasts rebels


Front Page | World | UK | UK Politics | Business | Sci/Tech | Health | Education | Sport | Entertainment | Talking Point | High Graphics | Feedback | Help | Noticias | Newyddion |


Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage | ©