
Abducted: Keyes was tied to the death of Samantha 'Sammy' Koenig, the 
barista who vanished in February from her coffee stand workplace.
 

                 Dead: Israel Keyes was found dead in his cell Sunday morning
 
 
  Stolen: After killing Koenig police said Keyes used her phone to fake text messages from her and conceal the abduction.
A man charged in the 
death of an Alaska barista has killed himself, and authorities said 
Sunday he had been linked to at least seven other possible slayings in 
three other states.
  
Israel Keyes was found 
dead in his Anchorage jail cell Sunday morning. U.S. Attorney Karen 
Loeffler said at a news conference that Keyes killed himself. Keyes
was facing a March trial in federal court for the murder of 18-year-old
Samantha Koenig, who was abducted from an Anchorage coffee kiosk last 
February.
  
He was later arrested in Texas after using the victim's debit 
card.Authorities said Keyes confessed to 
killing Bill and Lorraine Currier of Essex, Vt. The couple was reported 
missing in June 2011.Keyes also indicated he 
killed four others in Washington state and one person in New York state,
but did not give the victims' names, authorities said.
 
The
FBI contends Keyes killed Koenig less than a day after she was 
kidnapped. Her body was recovered April 2 from an ice-covered lake north
of Anchorage. Koenig's disappearance had gripped the city for weeks.
A
surveillance camera showed an apparently armed man in a hooded sweat 
shirt leading Koenig away from the coffee stand. Koenig's friends and 
relatives established a reward fund and plastered the city with flyers 
with her photo in hopes of finding the young woman alive.
 
Prosecutors
said Keyes stole the debit card from a vehicle she shared that was 
parked near her home, obtained the personal identification number and 
scratched the number into the card.
 
After 
killing Koenig, Keyes used her phone to send text messages to conceal 
the abduction, according to prosecutors.
He flew to Texas and returned 
Feb. 17 to Anchorage, where he sent another text message demanding 
ransom and directing it to the account connected to the stolen debit 
card, according to prosecutors.
  
Keyes made 
withdrawals from automated teller machines in Alaska, Arizona, New 
Mexico and Texas before his arrest in Texas, according to prosecutors. Koenig's family said there was no apparent previous connection between the teen and the suspect.
 
 
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