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The Most Infamous Cold Cases in FBI History

The Most Infamous Cold Cases in FBI History

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Wall Street Bombing

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Roland T. Owen

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Black Dahlia

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Boy in the Box

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

The Zodiac Killer

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

D.B. Cooper

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Jimmy Hoffa

Keystone / Hulton Archive via Getty Images

Truman Presidential Library Thefts

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Keddie Cabin Murders

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

New Bedford Highway Killer

DenisTangneyJr / iStock via Getty Images

Gardner Museum Heist

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

I-70 Killer

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George Stanley "Junior" Burdynski

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Amber Hagerman

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

JonBenet Ramsey

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Ricky McCormick

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Missy Bevers

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The Delphi Historic Trail Murders

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Wall Street Bombing
Roland T. Owen
Black Dahlia
Boy in the Box
Alcatraz Escape
The Zodiac Killer
D.B. Cooper
Jimmy Hoffa
Truman Presidential Library Thefts
Keddie Cabin Murders
New Bedford Highway Killer
Gardner Museum Heist
I-70 Killer
George Stanley "Junior" Burdynski
Amber Hagerman
JonBenet Ramsey
Ricky McCormick
The Jamison Family
Missy Bevers
The Delphi Historic Trail Murders

In 1908, the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) was established as expanding urban populations saw an increase in crime and corruption rates. Prior to this, many cities with populations over 50,000 relied on local police forces, and federal oversight was limited, with the Secret Service being primarily responsible for national crime and security.

After a factory worker lost his job in Ohio and traveled to Buffalo to shoot President McKinley, the incident led to Teddy Roosevelt transitioning from the vice presidency to the presidency. This event highlighted the need for a federal agency dedicated to security and law enforcement. The FBI is authorized to investigate and solve federal crimes across nine distinct categories: civil rights violations, counterintelligence threats, cyber crimes, organized crime, public corruption, terrorism, violent crime, weapons of mass destruction, and white-collar crime.

For this article, the highlighted cases are from cold case forums and shows like "Unsolved Mysteries." They are sorted by date from oldest to newest. (Also check out 21 of Most Famous Cold Cases in American History.)

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