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Most intriguing unsolved non-JtR serial killer cases

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  • sdreid
    replied
    The case is very similar to Scotland's Bible John Case, removed by a quarter century.

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  • sdreid
    replied
    Yes, Claremont will become a classic if it's not solved soon.

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  • GUT
    replied
    G'Day

    More seriously and closer to home (for me anyway) the Claremont killings in WA

    GUT

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  • GUT
    replied
    G'Day all

    I keep reading on this thread that the alphabet murders are unsolved I was certain that Hercule Poirot broke that one wide open.

    GUT

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  • sdreid
    replied
    I guess there are too many people alive who remember it real time and are tired of hearing about it.

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  • sdreid
    replied
    Although, like the Ripper 50th and as the most recent edition of Ripperana noted, the JFK assassination 50th seemed to fall short of what I expected.

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  • sdreid
    replied
    Originally posted by sdreid View Post
    Yes, Zodiac is the other serial killer, in addition JtR, that has a major internet presence.
    And, that's probably only going to increase with the coming 50th anniversary.

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  • sdreid
    replied
    She maybe got smart.

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  • sdreid
    replied
    I think Rolling became engaged to the woman he wrote the book with but I don't see that they ever got married.

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  • sdreid
    replied
    Anyway, Rolling was executed in 2006.

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  • sdreid
    replied
    There was some considerable controversy when Rolling was allowed to collaborate on a book about himself that was released while he was on death row. I saw it at Barnes & Noble and wouldn't even pick it up - I did the same when I saw Ian Brady's book on the rack.

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  • sdreid
    replied
    Originally posted by RivkahChaya View Post
    I have a vague memory of some later murders at a Florida University in the early 1980s, that people thought may have been by the "Chi Omega killer," even though one of the victims was a man-- theory was that he was a witness. They were not Bundy victims, and I don't remember the resolution of that case, if there was one. Google-fu is failing me.
    The first that came to my mind was Danny Rolling the Gainesville Ripper but that was 1990.

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  • sdreid
    replied
    Originally posted by RavenDarkendale View Post
    Probably due to the fact that no one knows who Zodiac is, and the coded messages sent to newspapers. Similar to JtR...

    The interesting claim that police had him after the Stine murder and he fooled them into chasing a phantom is interesting.
    Yes, I think that's where the most prominent suspect sketch came from.

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  • Mayerling
    replied
    Originally posted by RivkahChaya View Post
    ,
    Bundy had groups, if you will-- different groups of dump sites in different states, plus the mass murder in Florida, and they weren't all connected until fairly late in the game. In fact, the bodies were not necessarily found in the order they were killed, so some weren't found until Bundy had long fled the area. Some of the women Bundy confessed to murdering have never been found.
    Hi Rivkah,

    You have to remember that Bundy became a rarity - the serial killer who was caught and convicted and had run out of appeals (and was increasingly sweating because he knew his life would soon be stamped out). I recall his final hours, where he tried to blame an interest in pornography for his criminal behavior, and where he was trying to stretch out his final days as far as possible by "revealing" to the authorities the locations of his victims' bodies or remains one at a time so their families could have closure. In a highly satisfactory (if sadistic) way, Bundy learned that the family of dozens of real or potential victims actually fully suspected him of the killings, and looked forward to his actual execution as closure. He was a nervous wreck the final moments of his life. Never has the death penalty seemed so wonderfully successful.

    Jeff

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  • RivkahChaya
    replied
    Originally posted by sdreid View Post
    However, I do believe it was called the "Ted Case" by some after he gave his actual Christian name to one of the women he tried to "befriend" at Lake Sammamish.
    One of his murders was several women, including one or two surviving victims, but three or four dead, at least one of whom was raped, at the Chi Omega sorority house at Florida State University. Some of them were strangled, and some were bludgeoned, and this was before DNA, so the police theorized more than one killer. The survivors had been bludgeoned, and had poor memories of the event.

    Anyway, it was often referred to as the "Chi Omega massacre."

    It happened shortly after Ted Bundy had escaped prison in Colorado, and no one realized he was in Florida. He had never committed a mass murder like that, and usually took his victims home, then dumped the bodies elsewhere, as far as anyone knew.

    I have a vague memory of some later murders at a Florida University in the early 1980s, that people thought may have been by the "Chi Omega killer," even though one of the victims was a man-- theory was that he was a witness. They were not Bundy victims, and I don't remember the resolution of that case, if there was one. Google-fu is failing me.

    Bundy had groups, if you will-- different groups of dump sites in different states, plus the mass murder in Florida, and they weren't all connected until fairly late in the game. In fact, the bodies were not necessarily found in the order they were killed, so some weren't found until Bundy had long fled the area. Some of the women Bundy confessed to murdering have never been found.

    Leave a comment:

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