Atlantic city serial killer 2012




















Just had to correct that. Messages: Likes Received: 1 Trophy Points: 0. Some of them are very similiar, and then some are equally not MoonUnderfoot , Jan 27, Messages: 2, Likes Received: Trophy Points: I do see similarities with each of them. Messages: Likes Received: 7 Trophy Points: 0. Maybe the killer has a type, maybe he doesn't. In '77 the press said Berkowitz would only kill women with long, dark hair.

That turned out to be false according to the killer himself. It was just chance. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk. Messages: 36 Likes Received: 0 Trophy Points: 0. I believe the AC and GB4 is the same killer. The timeline, victim profiles, the hotel connection to Long island with Kim Raffo, etc.. Again, I do not believe anything about the killer having a shoe fetish or the killer being of a certain faith because the victims were missing shoes and were facing east etc.

Molly Jean Dilts Megan Waterman Barbara Breidor Melissa Barthelemy Kim Raffo Amber Lynn Costell And The connection Theforeigner , Jul 16, She originally grew up on Long Island but then moved to Brooklyn, New York, where at 14 she met the man she would later marry, Hugh Auslander. I do wonder if any influential people, within LE , politics or bizz, are related to Kim Raffo's x-husband or his family???

Messages: Likes Received: 18 Trophy Points: 0. CriminalMinds , Jul 16, A medical examiner determined Roberts died of asphyxiation, possibly by strangulation. Raffo, who had been in the water for less than 36 hours, was strangled, the medical examiner ruled. All four were clothed. Their shoes, pocketbooks, identification and cell phones were never found, perhaps taken as trophies.

A former high-ranking law enforcement official who worked on the case recently provided NJ Advance Media with an inside account of the investigation in its early days, including details never before disclosed. The official spoke on the condition that he not be named because he did not want to damage relationships with his former colleagues.

Among the disclosures:. The other women had no discernible defensive wounds, but because of the state of decomposition, wounds could not be ruled out. The DNA did not match anyone in law enforcement databases. At about 5 a. When she did not, the doctor called her several times, receiving no answer. Using Raffo's cell phone records, investigators tracked down and interviewed the doctor, ultimately clearing him of suspicion because surveillance video from the hotel and casino appeared to confirm his account.

The man's calls to Raffo were routed to a cell tower on the Black Horse Pike, not far from where the bodies were discovered. The official was critical of the investigation's structure, saying four separate teams of detectives were assigned to investigate each killing independently, as if there were four killers, because he said the prosecutor's office was hesitant to label the slayings the work of a serial killer in a city so dependent on tourism.

As a result, the official said, one team often duplicated what another team had already done, and communication between teams was not as fluid as it should have been despite daily meetings. It would be months before prosecutors acknowledged to reporters the killings were likely the work of one person.

In another misstep, the official said, the investigation did not immediately include veteran Atlantic City vice officers because the women were found in Egg Harbor Township.

Those officers, deeply familiar with the resort's streetwalkers, could have provided insight and worked their contacts on the street, the official said. A multi-agency task force ultimately was formed a month later. This law enforcement photo shows an aerial view of the Golden Key Motel.

The numbers along the drainage canal denote where the bodies of four women were found. The women, all prostitutes in Atlantic City, are believed to be victims of a serial killer. Atlantic City Police Chief Henry White did not return a call for comment, and the city's mayor, Don Guardian, was unavailable for comment, a spokeswoman said. In the months and years after the killings, investigators interviewed hundreds of people, from a man who had a collection of women's shoes in his Pacific Avenue hotel room to a local petty criminal who confessed while jailed.

He was later found to have an alibi and referred to a psychiatric facility. Investigators gave their closest attention to a Salem County handyman who had been living at the Golden Key Motel when the murders occurred. The man, who at one point was placed under hour surveillance, later pleaded guilty to an invasion of privacy charge for secretly videotaping his girlfriend's daughter in the bathroom of the couple's home.

But authorities could find no connection to the Atlantic City case, and he was never publicly declared a suspect. Though his name was widely reported at the time, NJ Advance Media is not naming him now because he has not been charged in connection with the killings.

The man voluntarily provided DNA samples. No match. With all the DNA they've had for all that time, the fact that he was never charged speaks volumes, in my opinion," said the man's Atlantic City-based lawyer, James J. Leonard Jr. He's not the guy, period. The attorney said he has no doubt investigators want to find the killer and have worked hard toward that goal, but he said he believes detectives were so convinced his client committed the crime they neglected to pursue other avenues.

As investigators closed off the scene to canvass the area for clues, they made more tragic discoveries. The bodies of three other women would turn up by the end of the day: year-old Barbara Breidor, year-old Molly Dilts, and year-old Tracy Ann Roberts. All women were assumed to be sex workers; all had been killed by strangulation.

Almost 15 years since the four victims were found, no arrests have been made. No new clues have led to solid information in Long Island, either. Even though some might compare the killers in Atlantic City and Long Island , there's a standout difference in how the Atlantic City serial killer left their victims.

The victims of were all found behind the motel, strangled, and their bodies were positioned eastward. Police found them all barefoot, and a few hundred feet from each other, reports NJ.



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