American inmate is ‘deadliest serial killer in US history’: FBI

An inmate who claims to have killed more than 90 women across America is now considered to be the deadliest serial killer in US history, the Federal Bureau of Investigation said.
Samuel Little claims to have killed more than 90 women across America and is now considered to be the deadliest serial killer in US historySamuel Little claims to have killed more than 90 women across America and is now considered to be the deadliest serial killer in US history
Samuel Little claims to have killed more than 90 women across America and is now considered to be the deadliest serial killer in US history

Samuel Little, who has been behind bars since 2012, told investigators last year that he was responsible for about 90 killings nationwide between 1970 and 2005.

The FBI says federal crime analysts believe all of his confessions are credible and officials have been able to verify 50 confessions so far.

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Investigators also provided new information and details about five cases in Florida, Arkansas, Kentucky, Nevada and Louisiana.

The 79-year-old is serving multiple life sentences in California. He says he strangled his 93 victims, nearly all of them women.

Some of his victims were on the margins of society. Many were originally deemed overdoses, or attributed to accidental or undetermined causes. Some bodies were never found.

The FBI provided 30 drawings of some of his victims – colour portraits that were drawn by Little himself in prison. They are haunting portraits, mostly of black women.

The agency also provided videos taken during prison interviews with Little. He described how he spoke about a woman he strangled in 1993 – and how he rolled her down a slope on a desolate road. “I heard a secondary road noise and that meant she was still rolling,” he said.

In another video, he described a victim in New Orleans. “She was pretty. Light colored, honey brown skin,” he said with a small smile. “She was tall for a woman. Beautiful shape. And, uh, friendly.”

They met in a club in1982. She left with him in his car and they parked by a bayou. “That’s the only one that I ever killed by drowning,” he said.

Investigators around the country are still trying to piece together his confessions with unidentified remains and unsolved cases from decades past.

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In August , he pleaded guilty to murdering four women in Ohio. He was convicted in California of three killings in 2013 and pleaded guilty to another last year in Texas.

Little, who often went by the name Samuel McDowell, grew up with his grandmother in Lorain, Ohio. He was described by investigators as a transient and former boxer who traveled the country preying on drug addicts, troubled women and others.

Authorities in Knox County, Tennessee, said on Monday that a woman named Martha Cunningham was likely to have been a victim of Little’s.

The Knoxville News Sentinel reported in December that a cold case investigator with the Knox County Sheriff’s Office had identified the victim who Little called “Martha.” The Knoxville mother’s body was found in a wooded area in eastern Knox County in 1975.

Ms Cunningham’s body was found by a pair of hunters in January 1975. She was bruised and nude from the waist down; her underwear and girdle bunched around her knees. Her purse and some of her jewelry were missing. Her body appeared to have been dragged into the woods and dumped behind a pine tree.

Despite that evidence, detectives at the time attributed Ms Cunningham’s death to natural causes within a day. The medical examiner’s investigative report lists the probable cause of death as “unknown.”

America’s other most prolific serial killers include Ted Bundy, who confessed to 30 homicides from about 1974 to 1978. John Wayne Gacy killed at least 33 boys and young men in the 1970s.

Arguably one of the deadliest globally was the British general practitioner Harold Shipman, who an investigative panel determined was responsible for the deaths of 250. He was convicted in 2000 over the deaths of 15.

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