And available only in the PDN's Sunday print edition . . .

And available only in the PDN’s Sunday print edition . . .

THE FBI IS trying to make sense of “tantalizing clues” left behind by serial killer Israel Keyes, who lived and worked quietly in the Makah tribal community of Neah Bay for seven years.

Before his suicide in Anchorage, Alaska, last year, Keyes led investigators to believe he had killed at least 11 people — including five in Washington state during the time he was in Neah Bay.

He tied homemade milk-jug anchors to one body and dumped it from a boat into 100 feet of water in Lake Crescent, 18 miles west of Port Angeles.

He called Neah Bay “a boring town,” indicating that looking for thrills might have been a reason he killed.

Keyes also talked mysteriously about a 4½-inch knife he bought in Port Angeles.

And now the FBI is seeking the public’s help to learn more about Keyes and his victims . . .

This is one of many stories only in the print edition of Sunday’s Peninsula Daily News, on sale at newsstands across Jefferson and Clallam counties.

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