Story highlights Anchorage police release details on serial killer Israel Keyes

Keyes was "addicted to the feel of the hunt and of killing," detective says

Keyes took pride in being his own kind of serial killer, detective says

Keyes confessed to eight killings; he committed suicide in his cell this month

Confessed serial killer Israel Keyes was a murder addict who found great enjoyment in taking people's lives, police say.

"Israel Keyes didn't kidnap and kill people because he was crazy, he didn't kidnap and kill people because his deity told him to or because he had a bad childhood. Israel Keyes did this because he got an immense amount of enjoyment out of it, much like an addict gets an immense amount of enjoyment out of drugs," said Anchorage, Alaska, police Detective Monique Doll at a news briefing.

"He was addicted to the feeling he got when he was doing this, addicted to the feel of the hunt and of killing," Doll said.

Keyes killed the last of his known victims, Anchorage coffee stand barista Samantha Koenig, 18, in February. He has confessed to killing at least seven other people: two in Vermont, four in Washington state, and one somewhere on the East Coast.

He committed suicide in his Alaska jail cell earlier this month by slitting his wrist and strangling himself with bedding.

Anchorage police and the FBI gave more details about their interviews with Keyes on Monday in hopes of generating new tips about his crimes. Police said that while he admitted eight murders, there may be at least three more, and that they need the public's help in their investigations.

"We want people to know what kind of person this fellow was so they can help us connect dots and maybe generate connections between missing person cases and Israel Keyes," Anchorage police Chief Mark Mew said.

Authorities played a chilling tape Monday in which Keyes talked about how he lay in wait at an Alaska park with a sniper's rifle in hopes of killing a young couple who had parked there. He had his kill zone prepared, with drain cleaner and a shovel at the ready to dissolve and bury the body parts.

"I was gonna do my thing in the parking lot," Keyes said, but an Anchorage patrol officer showed up and checked on the couple. Keyes said he was prepared to kill the officer, too, but aborted his plan when another officer showed up.

"It could've got ugly, but fortunately for the cop guy," he said with a chuckle, "his backup showed up."

"I almost got myself into a lot of trouble on that one," Keyes said. "As soon as his backup showed up I decided I better call it a night."

The incident is indicative of the way Keyes saw himself. Doll described him as "very matter of fact" but comfortable with who he was.

"Israel Keyes never expressed in any way, shape or form that he was ashamed of or regretted his actions," Doll said. "He knew what he was and he was fine with it."

The Anchorage detective also said Keyes took pride "in living this Dr. Jekyll-Mr. Hyde lifestyle," with neither family nor friends suspecting him.

Doll said Keyes researched and read about, but did not emulate, other serial killers, including Ted Bundy, who killed as many as 40 people between 1974 and 1978.

"He was very careful to say he had not patterned himself after any other serial killer," she said. "His ideas were his own. ... That mattered a lot to him."

Those ideas included careful planning and the ability to back off killing plans if variables changed the situation, such as a planned victim with a large dog, or a victim who didn't have a vehicle in which Keyes could evade authorities.

Police said he broke his own rules in the abduction and killing of Koenig. He used her debit card to make an ATM withdrawal that eventually led police to him in Texas.

Mew said Keyes started "to be a bit compulsive toward the end."

Anchorage police Officer Jeff Bell said Keyes' end did not come as the killer thought it would. He envisioned being killed in a gun battle with police during a bank robbery, Bell said.

Besides Koenig, whose body was found in a lake north of Anchorage, authorities have identified only two of Keyes' other victims, Bill and Lorraine Currier of Essex Junction, Vermont.

More clues may come from an illegible, blood-soaked note that was found in Keyes' cell after his suicide. That is being analyzed at the FBI's lab in Quantico, Virginia, Mews said, in hopes of determining what Keyes wrote.

Authorities are asking that anyone who may have information about Keyes get in contact with the FBI at 1-800-CALL-FBI or call their local FBI office.