Advanced DNA technology helped South Florida cold case investigators link a man known as the “pillowcase rapist” to a string of sexual assaults stemming back to the 1980s.

The Broward County Sheriff’s Office announced Tuesday that Robert Kohler, 62, had been tied to six rapes after its cold case unit, formed in 2019 to address about 350 cases with dead-end leads, was able to link the crimes using DNA. 

Broward Sheriff Gregory Tony said Koehler, who has been incarcerated in Miami-Dade County since January 2020 on charges of sexual battery against one woman in the early 1980s, may have committed between 40 and 45 rapes in the greater Miami area.

Koehler is accused of breaking into the homes of women at night or early in the morning as they either prepared for bed or slept, typically with his face covered by a pillowcase or other fabric and carrying a sharp weapon, according to Broward authorities.

Authorities say he would threaten victims and their families if they said anything or screamed. He typically would tie their hands and or their feet during the assaults, said cold-case Sgt. Kami Floyd.

The suspect would then steal from the apartment before making his getaway. 

The Broward Sheriff’s Office believes Koehler struck at least eight times between 1984 and 1985, according to a press release.

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While the cases garnered extensive media coverage in the 1980s, even causing officials to launch a new South Florida law enforcement task force to investigate them, the trail went cold in the 1990s.

The blood-typing technology available at the time was not enough to solve the crimes, Floyd explained.

Broward Sheriff's Office Cold Case Unit Sgt. Kami Floyd, right, speaks as Sheriff Gregory Tony looks on during a news conference, Tuesday, June 7, 2022, at the BSO Public Safety Building in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Authorities announced that they were able to identify and charge a man known as the "Pillowcase Rapist," Robert Koehler, for multiple sexual assault cases in Broward County in the 1980's. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

“The task force that was put together…had no new information coming forward. There were no new cases, no witnesses, no victims and nobody who could provide anything,” said Floyd, who led the team that cracked the cold cases. 

She helped launch an initiative in 2019 to reexamine the department’s sexual battery cases over the years and test all of its sexual assault kits, she said in a video interview released by Broward County Sheriff’s Office.

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Floyd, who’s worked with the sheriff’s office about nine years, said she ran across a newspaper article mentioning the “pillowcase rapist” and 40 to 45 unsolved cases in Broward and Miami-Dade counties during the 1980s and it peaked her interest. 

With no dates and no victim names, Floyd said she had very little to work with. It took months of investigators digging through 500 boxes of evidence, each containing hundreds of cases. Then she found a match: A woman who was assaulted in her Pompano Beach apartment in June 1984. Soon, she had a list of cases and victims. 

Robert Koehler, who is currently behind bars in Miami-Dade County, Florida, has been linked to six once-cold sexual assault cases in the 1980s with the help of advanced DNA technology, according to the Broward Sheriff's Office in Broward County, Florida.

“I luckily did locate one that matched,” Floyd said of the first case. “With the help of our crime lab, (I located) in a freezer some specimens that belonged to other victims that had a list of (eight) names that we believed to be related to the ‘pillowcase rapist,’” Floyd said.

Advancements in DNA technology allowed the lab to retest the specimens and form a full DNA profile of the suspect, Floyd said. 

Around the time her team began testing, Miami-Dade authorities announced the arrest of Koehler in early 2020. 

According to an arrest warrant, investigators got their breakthrough after they obtained a DNA sample from Koehler’s son following an unrelated arrest. That sample was then linked to an assault in 1983, leading detectives to Brevard County where they followed Koehler to obtain DNA samples from objects he touched.