The chipped Formica of the AMF Broadway Bowling Alley hasn’t seen a polished shoe or the crash of pins in twenty-two years. It’s seen worse, though. It saw three lives extinguished on a cold January night in 2002. Erin Golla, Robert Zajac, and James Springer – a closing shift employee, a regular, and another employee finishing their night – never made it out the doors. They met a gunman, a shadow in a dark trench coat, who decided a few dollars was worth three human lives. The scene, discovered by a friend arriving for a ride, was a tableau of senseless violence, the kind that clings to a place like a bad smell.
The Bureau calls it a triple homicide. We call it a cold case, a festering wound in the underbelly of Littleton, Colorado. The shooter, a phantom even then, relieved them of whatever cash was on hand, then vanished into the night, leaving behind only echoes and unanswered questions. Witnesses described a late-model dark pickup, a common enough sight in these parts, but the driver remained a cipher. No name, no date of birth, no known aliases. The FBI files are frustratingly sparse on details – race, sex, even basic physical characteristics remain unknown, adding layers to the already frustrating lack of leads.
Twenty-two years is a long time for a killer to disappear, to reinvent himself. But the scent of blood doesn’t wash away so easily. Law enforcement believes this individual is still out there, a potential threat to anyone who crosses his path. And they are warning the public: consider him armed and dangerous. The image of that dark trench coat, a cliché perhaps, is burned into the memories of the first responders, a haunting reminder of the brutality within those bowling alley walls.
A substantial reward is being offered for information leading to the arrest and conviction of this individual. Money talks, and in a case like this, it might be the only way to break the silence. Someone, somewhere, remembers something. A glimpse of that truck, a face in a crowd, a whispered conversation. Anything.
If you have any information, no matter how small, regarding the murders at the AMF Broadway Bowling Alley, contact the FBI immediately. Don’t wait. Don’t hesitate. A family deserves closure. Justice demands it. Call the Denver Field Office at (303) 632-1200 or submit your tip online at tips.fbi.gov. Let’s bring this ghost to justice.
🔠Key Facts
| Full Name | Triple Homicide Investigation — Colorado |
| Charges | Homicide Victims Littleton, Colorado January 27, 2002 |
| Aliases | None known |
| Date of Birth | Unknown |
| Race / Sex | Unknown / Unknown |
| Nationality | Unknown |
| Height | Unknown |
| Weight | Unknown |
| Eyes / Hair | Unknown / Unknown |
| Scars & Marks | None reported |
| Location | Colorado |
📋 Source: FBI Most Wanted — Triple Homicide Investigation — Colorado
If you have information about this fugitive, contact your local FBI field office or submit a tip at tips.fbi.gov.
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