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The Most Infamous Crime in Every State

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The Most Infamous Crime in Every State

Americans are fascinated by crime stories and although it is horrifying to see what travesties can be imparted onto people by truly evil criminal masterminds, it is also somewhat riveting to watch it play out – from the crime to the arrest to the court case and finally, and hopefully, to the sentence received. Some crimes attract more attention and last longer in the collective memory than others. While it may not seem possible, all 50 states have some level of crime and this is a collective of the most infamous crime in each state.

These crimes are a dark stain on the nation’s history. Many of these senseless tragedies led to greater events, like the Civil Rights and LGBTQ movements. Some are more severe than others but all are tragedies. To date, some crimes remain unsolved. (Here are 22 famous unsolved crimes in America.)

To find the most infamous crime in every state, 24/7 Tempo used information from the FBI website and media sources such as Readers Digest, CNN, and the BBC. Because “most notorious” is a subjective judgment, we used editorial discretion to select crimes with particularly tragic or devastating impacts.

Alabama

  • Crime: The 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in 1963

The battle over Civil Rights was at its height in the 1960s when members of the Klu Klux Klan bombed a church in Birmingham, Alabama, killing four young girls ages 11 to 14 and injuring more than 20 others. The Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. spoke at the funeral for the girls. The horrific crime shocked the country and spurred the Civil Rights movement, but the FBI closed the investigation after two years and blocked any prosecutions.

The case was reopened in the late 1970s with one man, Robert Chambliss, sentenced to life in prison, and two others, Thomas Blanton and Bobby Cherry, convicted in the early 2000s. Another alleged participant, Herman Cash, died without ever being charged.

Alaska

  • Crime: Robert Hansen hunting women in the Alaskan wilderness in the 1970s

This shocking Alaskan crime was dramatized in a movie called “Frozen Ground,” which starred Nicholas Cage and John Cusack. It took place during the 1970s when Alaska was experiencing a boom in oil pipeline construction. Tens of women were hunted down and captured by baker Robert Hansen using a rifle. He went on to murder at least 17 of them.

Eventually, he was caught and sent to trial in 1984 where he confessed to killing 17 women and raping 30 more. Hansen was sentenced to a 461-year sentence for the murders and died in jail at the age of 75 years.

Arizona

  • Crime: Jodi Arias murdered her ex-boyfriend in 2008

When Travis Alexander was found in a pool of blood at his home in Mesa, Arizona, his ex-girlfriend Jodi Arias was soon fingered as a suspect. Although she claimed self-defense, Arias was charged and convicted of first-degree murder in 2013. However, the jury deadlocked on whether to give her the death penalty. A second jury couldn’t decide on a penalty either, and a judge imposed a life sentence without the possibility of parole after 25 years. She’s currently serving her term in a state prison in Arizona.

Arkansas

  • Crime: The West Memphis murders in 1994

When three second-graders were found bound and mutilated in a pond, suspicion fell on three supposed “Satan worshippers” – Jessie Misskelley, Damon Echols, and Jason Baldwin. Called the West Memphis Three,” the teens were convicted, with Echols receiving the death penalty (never carried out) and the other men sentenced to life imprisonment.

But in 2007, DNA evidence indicated the men had no connection to the crime. Sketchy eyewitness testimony and contested confessions further cast doubt on their guilt. In 2011, the men entered Alford pleas, a rare legal maneuver in which they asserted their innocence but admitted the prosecutors had enough evidence to convict them. They were released after serving 18 years in jail.

California

Drive-in restaurant 'The Track', Los Angeles, CA, July 10, 1948

  • Crime: Black Dahlia murder in 1947

This crime has entered not just Californian history but the crime history of the entire U.S. In this unsolved murder, the body of a young woman was found in a Los Angeles park. She had been severed at the waist. Investigations revealed the victim to be an aspiring actress called Elizabeth Short. She was dubbed the “Black Dahlia,” probably because of a combination of her dark clothing and as a reference to “The Blue Dahlia,” a movie in theaters the previous year. Despite the involvement of the FBI, the murderer has never been identified.

Colorado

  • Crime: Columbine High School massacre in 1999

On April 20, 1999, Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris entered Columbine High School and gunned down 12 students and one teacher and wounded more than 20 others in what was then the worst school shooting in U.S. history. The shooting spree ended when Klebold and Harris took their own lives.

Although a motive was never determined, investigators learned both teens had planned to bomb the school in an attack like the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995. The victims obtained some measure of justice when Mark Manes, the man who had sold the gun and ammunition to Harris, was sentenced to six years in prison.

Connecticut

  • Crime: Sandy Hook massacre in 2012

Eleven days before Christmas, 20-year-old Adam Lanza strode into Sandy Hook Elementary School and killed 20 first graders and six adult staffers. Lanza killed his mother before the school shootings, and it was later learned he had a history of mental illness. Before police could capture him, Lanza killed himself. The senseless crime kicked off a debate on gun safety that continues today.

Delaware

  • Crime: Arsenic poisonings committed by Cordelia Botkin in 1898

John Preston Dunning cheated on his wife with several women. When he broke it off with Cordelia Botkin, whom he had met in San Francisco, to return to his wife, Mary, in Delaware, the woman didn’t take kindly to rejection. Botkin sent a box of poisoned chocolates to Mary that killed her and her sister.

When police found a piece of string in her hotel room that had been cut so she could fill the box of candies laced with arsenic, Botkin’s fate was sealed. She was found guilty and sentenced to the women’s prison ward at San Quentin. She died in 1910.

Florida

Pensacola, Florida | Pensacola Beach Aerial

  • Crime: Gerard John Schaefer killed women and teenage girls from 1969 to 1973

Gerard John Schaefer was a sheriff’s deputy who obtained his job with a forged letter of recommendation. He abducted two teenage girls, tied them to trees, and threatened to rape and murder them. He was called back to the station, though, where he told officers that he had tied the girls up to teach them a lesson. They were rescued and Schaefer was sentenced to a year in jail in December 1972.

Earlier that year, another two teenage girls hadn’t been so lucky. Though their bodies weren’t discovered until April 1973, 16-year-old Georgia Jessup and 17-year-old Susan Price had been bound and butchered by Schaefer the previous September. He was eventually arrested and convicted of the murders, but he was also linked to at least nine other murders and disappearances and perhaps as many as 28. Given a life sentence for the Jessup and Price killings, Schaefer was stabbed to death in prison by another inmate at age 49.

Georgia

  • Crime: Murder of 10-year-old Emani Moss in 2013

The death of 10-year-old Emani Moss shocked the public and even brought hardened police officers to tears. After the body of the little girl was found burned in a trash bag, her father and stepmother, Eman Moss and Tiffany Moss, were charged with murder and child abuse. The couple had starved the child to death and incinerated her body to cover their crime. Eman Moss accepted a plea deal to escape the death penalty and was sentenced to life without parole. In 2019, Tiffany Moss was given the death penalty for the murder of her stepdaughter.

Hawaii

  • Crime: Xerox murders of 1999

The state of Hawaii was shocked when Byran Uyesugi entered his place of work in 1999 and shot eight people, seven of them died. He was an unhappy employee with mental health issues attributed to work-related stress. Uyesugi was caught and found guilty of seven counts of first-degree murder and second-degree attempted murder. He received a life sentence which he is still serving.

Idaho

  • Crime: Joseph Duncan III murdered two adults and two children in 2005

Convicted child molester Joseph Duncan III murdered 13-year-old Slade Groene; his mother, Brenda; and the mother’s boyfriend, Mark McKenzie, at the Groene home outside Coeur d’Alene, and abducted two other Groene children, eight-year-old Shasta and nine-year-old Dylan.

Dylan’s body was subsequently found in Lolo National Forest in Montana. Shasta was discovered with Duncan, who claimed he was returning her to her father because he’d decided not to kill her. Although Duncan received the death penalty for his crimes, he died of brain cancer in 2021 before he could be executed.

Illinois

  • Crime: The Killer Clown’s crimes between 1972 and 1978

John Wayne Gacy was known in his suburban Chicago town for performing as a clown at children’s parties – but his costume hid his sinister double life as a serial killer. In the 1970s, he was convicted of killing 33 boys and young men. He had been previously convicted and jailed for the sexual assault of a teenage boy. After his murder spree was uncovered, Gacy was convicted of murder and executed by lethal injection in 1994.

Indiana

  • Crime: “Hell’s Belle” killed perspective suitors and her children between 1884 and 1908

Belle Gunness, aka “Hell’s Belle,” immigrated to America in 1881 from Norway to find wealth. She found it, through schemes to collect insurance claims via mysterious fires and deaths, including those of her two husbands and her children. She also lured other men to her farmhouse by posting advertisements seeking suitors, but they were never seen again.

When relatives began to ask questions, her farmhouse burned down, with workers uncovering the bodies of 40 victims, including children. A hired hand at the farm was arrested for murder and arson. He was convicted of arson, but not murder. Before he died in prison, he told police about Belle’s crimes and said the body found in the burned building was not hers. Belle had planned the perfect getaway and skipped town with a stash of money from her bank accounts. She was never found and it is not known how or when she died.

Iowa

  • Crime: Villisca Axe Murders of 1912

After eight people were found bludgeoned to death in their beds with the blunt end of an ax in the town of Villisca, Iowa, suspicion fell on numerous suspects – chief among them Rev. Lyn George Jacklin Kelly. After leaving town on an early train the morning the murders were discovered, he wrote letters to law enforcement officials and family members of the deceased mentioning details of the crime that had not been made public. In 1917, he was arrested for the crime and confessed. He later recanted and was acquitted at two separate trials. No one else was ever tried for the killings.

Kansas

  • Crime: “In Cold Blood” Clutter family murders of 1959

What may have started as a robbery turned into murder in a rural town in Kansas in 1959. Parolees Eugene Hickock and Perry Smith broke into the home of Herbert Clutter and proceeded to kill him, his wife, and their two teenage children. The two men confessed to the murder of the farming family and were later executed. The murders were later recounted in a book by Truman Capote and made into a movie in 1967 called “In Cold Blood.”

Kentucky

  • Crime: “Angel of Death” Donald Harvey killed hospital patients between 1970 and 1987

Working as a hospital orderly at a hospital in the Kentucky town of London, Donald Harvey was anything but a healer. Over 10 months, he killed at least 12 patients at Marymount Hospital and later claimed to have killed 87 more. Although it took two decades, Harvey was eventually convicted and sentenced for his crimes in 1987. He died in prison in 2017.

Louisiana

  • Crime: Bonnie & Clyde’s crime spree between 1932 and 1934

Bonnie and Clyde may seem to be romantic characters from books and movies but they were cold-blooded killers. Their murdering spree took place during the Great Depression. Between them, they murdered at least 13 people, including law enforcement officers. This deadly love story came to a bad end when they were both killed during a shootout with the law in Louisiana.

Maine

  • Crime: The Black Bear B&B murders of 2006

Christian Charles Nielsen, a cook at the Sudbury Inn in Bethel, shot the live-in handyman at the Black Bear Bed & Breakfast in nearby Newry, where he was lodging. The next day, he murdered innkeeper Julie Bullard and the following day dispatched the innkeeper’s daughter and one of her friends – and even killed three dogs that lived on the property. He burned the handyman’s body and dumped it in the woods about 15 miles away, but dismembered the other bodies and left them, along with the dogs, outside the Black Bear.

When Nielsen’s father arrived at the B&B after the killings, he discovered those bodies and told police he thought his son was responsible. After Nielsen was arrested, he told police he had had no motive for the crime, but had been thinking about killing people for years. He is serving a life sentence in Maine State Prison.

Maryland

  • Crime: The Labor Day Rampage of 1990

Between Aug. 29 and Sept. 1, John Thanos killed three teenagers with a sawed-off semi-automatic rifle. One was a hitchhiker he picked up and the others were a gas station attendant and his girlfriend. Found guilty of the crimes, the hardened killer was killed by lethal injection in 1994, the first person executed in the Maryland Penitentiary in 33 years. Unrepentant, Thanos taunted the families of the victims at his trial and claimed that he wished he could dig up their bodies and defile them. As he was about to be executed, he reportedly said “Get on with it.”

Massachusetts

  • Crime: Murder of Lizzie Borden’s father and stepmother in 1892

“Lizzie Borden took an ax/And gave her mother 40 whacks/When she saw what she had done/She gave her father 41.” The popular rhyme sums up the brutal hatchet murders of Andrew Borden and Abby Borden, the father and stepmother of Lizzie Borden. Police found no clues as to who committed the crimes, but arrested Lizzie based on circumstantial evidence. A jury acquitted her, but people in her town still held her responsible. The home where the Bordens lived is now a tourist attraction.

Michigan

  • Crime: Navy vet raping and strangling women between 1992 and 1999

To his neighbors in Dearborn Heights, John Eric Armstrong was a Navy vet and devoted father. Yet the supposed gentle giant – he weighed more than 300 pounds – never got over a breakup with his high school girlfriend. Possibly to avenge the rejection, he started raping and murdering sex workers while he was in the Navy, starting when he was just 17 and claiming victims across four states and several Asian countries. He was arrested in 2000 and convicted of killing five women but may have murdered at least six others. He is serving a life sentence in prison.

Minnesota

Minnetonka, Minnesota | Carlson Towers at night

  • Crime: Tom Petters’ Ponzi scheme between 1998 and 2008

Criminals harm not just by inflicting physical pain. Financial crimes can be just as devastating, like the $3.65-billion Ponzi scheme run by Minnesotan Tom Petters. Among other ill effects, his financial machinations led to the bankruptcy of Minneapolis-based Sun Country Airlines, which had been relying on a loan from the Petters Group, and to the shuttering by regulators of the First Regional Bank in Los Angeles, which facilitated Petters’ schemes. The fact Petters gave much of his criminal gains to charity didn’t absolve him. He’s currently serving a 50-year sentence in Leavenworth.

Mississippi

  • Crime: Murder of Emmett Till in 1955

Fourteen-year-old Emmett Till, an African-American, was visiting relatives in Mississippi when he stepped into a store owned by Roy and Carolyn Bryant. The young man was accused of whistling at Carolyn, a white woman, an act that infuriated Roy. He and his brother, J.W. Milam, kidnapped Till, shot him in the head, and dumped his body in the Tallahatchie River. Roy Bryant and Milam were arrested and charged but were acquitted by an all-white jury.

The two men later admitted they committed the crime, but because they couldn’t be tried for the same crime after an acquittal, they were never punished for Till’s murder. The horrific crime helped galvanize the Civil Rights Movement. Carolyn subsequently admitted that her allegations against Till were false.

Missouri

Jefferson City, Missouri | Jefferson City, Missouri, USA

  • Crime: Gypsy Rose Blanchard convincing her online boyfriend to kill her mother in 2015

This tragic case will live on in the memories of Missouri citizens. Gypsy Rose Blanchard, along with her boyfriend,  murdered her mother, Dee Dee Blanchard. The circumstances leading up to the killing were complex. Gypsy Rose had suffered abuse for years at the hands of her mother who to everyone else appeared to be a loving mother.

Instead, Dee Dee suffered from Munchausen by proxy and constantly made her daughter appear sick to get attention. Gypsy Rose pled guilty to second-degree murder and after being sentenced to 10 years in Missouri’s Chillicothe Correctional Center, she was released early on December 28, 2023.

Montana

  • Crime: Unabomber’s series of attacks between 1978 and 1995

Theodore Kaczynski began mailing untraceable explosive devices in 1978. Over the next 17 years, he sent or delivered bombs to university professors and others he disdained for crimes against the environment or for developing modern technology, killing three and wounding nearly two dozen.

Termed the Unabomber, Kaczynski eluded the FBI for years until his brother, David, identified his brother’s writings in a manifesto published in the Washington Post. That led authorities to an isolated cabin in Montana where Kaczynski lived. The Unabomber pled guilty and is now serving eight life sentences without possibility of parole.

Nebraska

  • Crime: Murder spree by Charlie Starkweather and Caril Fugate in 1958

Caril Ann Fugate was just 14 when she and her 18-year-old boyfriend, Charles Starkweather, went on a two-month killing spree through Nebraska and Wyoming. In all, they murdered 11 people, including Fugate’s mother, stepfather, and baby half-sister. Caril Ann claimed that Starkweather held her hostage, but a jury nevertheless convicted her and sentenced her to life in prison.

Starkweather was executed in the electric chair. After serving 17 years, Fugate was paroled and to this day maintains her innocence. The story of Fugate and Starkweather was the basis for the movies, “Badlands” and “Natural Born Killers.”

Nevada

  • Crime: Las Vegas mass shooting in 2017

It was a starry night in Las Vegas and 22,000 concertgoers were enjoying an outdoor music show by Jason Aldean. That all changed when 64-year-old Nevada resident Stephen Paddock began firing at the audience from a window on the 32nd floor of the nearby Mandalay Bay Hotel.

When the shooting stopped, at least 59 were dead and 527 others injured. Paddock killed himself as police rushed into his room at the hotel where 10 guns were stored. No motive has yet been uncovered for his heinous act.

New Hampshire

  • Crime: The Bear Brook murders between 1977 and 1981

The bodies of an adult woman and a younger girl were discovered in 1985 in a 55-gallon drum at Bear Brook State Park near Allenstown. In 2000, the remains of two more girls were found in the same place under similar circumstances. All four victims had died by blunt force trauma.

Although suspicion fell on Terrence Peder Rasmussen, aka Bob Evans, the father of one of the victims, the case remains unsolved. Rasmussen, however, was convicted of killing a woman he married in 2001, and sentenced to 15 years to life. He died in prison in 2010.

New Jersey

  • Crime: John List killed his wife, mother, and three kids in 1971

Ashamed to tell his family that he’d lost his accounting job, John List murdered his mother, wife, and three children in Westfield. He wanted them to go to heaven, he later said. After the murders, he left for North Carolina with his savings bonds. To cover his tracks, he cut himself out of family photos.

For 18 years, List got away with the crime, taking on a new identity and remarrying. But when a neighbor saw an image of what List would look like on “America’s Most Wanted,” he called the police. List was arrested and died in prison in 2008.

New Mexico

  • Crime: Video store murders in Albuquerque in 1996

The remarkable crime in New Mexico’s history took place relatively recently in 1996. Committed by 28-year-old Shane Harrison during an attempted robbery of a Hollywood Video store, the crime escalated when he shot and killed three employees. Harrison then went on to kidnap and execute the grandparents of one of his victims. In total, the sentence he received added up to 258 years in prison but he was not convicted on three of the killings.

New York

  • Crime: Bernie Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, defrauding thousands between the 1970s and 2008

New York has seen no shortage of horrific crimes over the years, but this one, though it involves no murders, stands out: For nearly three decades, Bernie Madoff ran the most elaborate Ponzi schemes in the nation’s history. All told, he swindled some $20 billion from clients, who included Steven Spielberg, actors Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick, and former New York Mets owner Fred Wilpon.

Madoff died in prison at age 82 while serving a 150-year sentence for his crimes. The Department of Justice set up a victim compensation fund and last year, announced that it had distributed more than $4 billion to those who’d been cheated by Madoff.

North Carolina

  • Crime: The Christmas mass murders of the Lawson family in 1929

This historic crime took place in Germanton in 1929. A tobacco farmer called Charlie Lawson murdered his wife and six of his seven children. His 16-year-old son Arthur only escaped because he was on an errand away from the farm. After the killings, Charlie Lawson killed himself and no one ever discovered why he had done it. Later, Lawson’s brother profited from the crimes by turning the house into a tourist attraction and even displayed the cake that Marie Lawson had baked for Christmas dinner.

North Dakota

  • Crime: The Turtle Lake Murders in 1920

North Dakota was the site of a horrific familicide in 1920. Jacob Wolf and his family, plus the son of a neighbor who did chores for the family, were found either shot or bludgeoned to death on their Turtle Lake farm. Angered over an alleged attack on his cow by the Wolf family dog, neighbor Henry Lake admitted to killing the family.

But he did leave an eight-month-old baby alive in her crib, explaining, “The reason I did not kill the baby was, I believe because I did not go into the room in which the baby lay.” He died in prison.

Ohio

  • Crime: Ariel Castro kidnappings and ‘House of Horror’ between 2002 and 2004

Three young women, Michelle Knight, Amanda Berry, and Gina DeJesus, ages 21, 16, and 14, respectively, accepted a ride from Ariel Castro. He then lured them to his home, where for years he imprisoned and sexually assaulted them, with Berry giving birth to a daughter. The women escaped when Berry broke through a fence and called 911. Castro was taken into custody but hanged himself in his cell. His house of horrors was soon demolished.

Oklahoma

  • Crime: Oklahoma City bombing in 1994

One of the most serious acts of terrorism in the U.S. is also the most notorious crime ever committed in Oklahoma. Having earlier served in the U.S. army in the Persian Gulf, where he earned a Bronze Star, Timothy McVeigh became disillusioned with his country. This prompted him to plant a bomb near the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. The explosion killed 168 people, including 19 young children. He was executed in 2001.

Oregon

  • Crime: The Longo family murders in 2001

Mary Jane Longo and her three children were reported missing from their Ohio home. Soon after, the body of four-year-old Zachary Longo was found floating off the Oregon coast. The bodies of Mary Jane and two more of her children were later discovered in or near the water. Mary Jane’s husband, Christian Longo, remained missing and was almost immediately put on the FBI’s 10 Most Wanted List.

Captured in Mexico using an alias, Longo said he committed the murders to escape mounting debt and the pressures of family life. Sentenced to death, Longo was the subject of a movie, “True Story,” starring James Franco. His death sentence was commuted to life in prison without possibility of parole in 2022.

Pennsylvania

  • Crime: Jerry Sandusky sexually abusing boys for decades since the 1970s

Led by legendary coach Joe Paterno, Penn State rose to the heights of college football. But one of the team’s coaches, Jerry Sandusky, had been abusing young boys for years under the guise of helping them through his charity organization. He was charged with 45 counts of abuse in 2012 and is serving a 30- to 60-year sentence in a Pennsylvania prison. He maintained his innocence, saying he only showered with the young boys. Shaken by the scandal, Paterno died in 2012.

Rhode Island

  • Crime: The Warwick Slasher’s murders between 1987 and 1989

The youngest serial killer in history, Craig Price stabbed two women and two young girls to death when he was between the ages of 13 and 15 – supposedly in a belated reaction to racial slurs hurled at him when he was a child. Tried and convicted as a minor, he would have been eligible for release at age 21. However, he got involved in violent prison fights which extended his term. Scheduled for release in 2022, Price stabbed another inmate with a homemade knife in 2017 and was sentenced to another 25 years for the attack.

South Carolina

  • Crime: South Carolina mom killing her two toddlers in 1994

Susan Smith strapped her two toddler sons into their car seats in her Mazda and pushed the car into a lake, where the two boys died. She later claimed the children had been abducted by a “strange man” but her story unraveled, and Smith was convicted of two counts of murder and sentenced to life in prison. She is eligible for parole in 2024. Her only explanation was that she wasn’t in her right mind at the time and didn’t plan the murders.

South Dakota

  • Crime: Robert Leroy Anderson’s sadistic murders between 1994 and 1996

Robert Leroy Anderson was convicted and sentenced to death for the kidnapping and killing of Larisa Dumansky of Sioux Falls in 1994 and Piper Streyle of rural Canistota in 1996. A third victim, Amy Anderson, fled before she was murdered. Authorities believe Anderson had committed even more crimes as a serial killer. He killed himself on death row in 2003 before he could be executed.

Tennessee

  • Crime: Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968

Civil Rights icon Martin Luther King, Jr. was in Memphis in support of striking sanitation workers. At the speech on April 3, he seemed to hint at the probability of not living a long life, saying, “I’ve seen the promised land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the promised land.”

King was assassinated the next day by James Earl Ray as he stood on his balcony at the Lorraine Hotel. The act set off race riots across the country, but was a pivotal moment in advancing the cause of equal rights.

Texas

  • Crime: The Enron scandal of 2001

When Enron went belly-up in 2001, fingers began to be pointed at CEO Kenneth Lay. It was later learned Lay’s sell-off of $300 million in stocks and other sketchy deals over a decade drove the company into what was then the country’s largest bankruptcy. The crash caused millions of dollars of losses for investors. The savings of former employees were also wiped out. Indicted on 11 counts of securities fraud, wire fraud, and making false and misleading statements, Lay died before sentencing.

Utah

  • Crime: Elizabeth Smart kidnapping in 2002

Elizabeth Smart was 14 years old and getting ready to graduate from middle school when Brian David Mitchell and his wife, Wanda Barzee, kidnapped her and held her hostage for nearly a year. After she was found, Smart detailed horror stories of rape and being forced to drink alcohol and watch pornography.

Mitchell was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison. Barzee was released from prison in 2018 with the stipulation that she register as a sex offender. Smart has since become a vocal advocate for child abuse victims through her Elizabeth Smart Foundation.

Vermont

  • Crime: Unsolved East Middlebury murders in 1935

As a mother and daughter walked in the woods in 1935, they found a skull. Further examination revealed the bodies of a woman and two young boys, probably her sons. Forensic science was still in its infancy so all investigators could decipher was that all three had been shot in the head. The crimes remain unsolved to this day.

Virginia

  • Crime: Virginia Tech shooting in 2007

A quiet day at Virginia Tech was shattered when Korean-born Seung-Hui Cho shot and killed 32 people on campus. At the time, it was the worst mass murder on a college campus since the Texas Tower shooting at the University of Texas in Austin in 1966. A letter Cho mailed before the crime referenced the Columbine school shooters, Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris. Cho killed himself before he could be taken into custody.

Washington

  • Crime: Ted Bundy murder spree in the 1970s and 1980s

Charming Ted Bundy hid a vicious secret: While living in Washington state, he would abduct, rape, and murder women. He often took their corpses back to his apartment. Although Bundy became a suspect in the 1970s, he was dismissed by authorities because of his clean-cut appearance. He was arrested in 1975 and 1977 but escaped both times.

Finally, after Bundy was arrested for a traffic violation on Feb. 15, 1978, he was tried for his crimes, sentenced to death, and executed in the electric chair in 1989. Although he confessed to 30 murders, Bundy may have committed many more crimes.

West Virginia

  • Crime: Murder of Skylar Neese in 2012

This horrific teen crime took place near Star City in West Virginia in 2012. Three friends left on a midnight joyride but one of them did not come home. Sixteen-year-old Skylar Neese was originally thought to have run away because she had snuck out her bedroom window. However, she had been with her best friends Sheila Eddy and Rachel Shoaf. It later transpired that the two no longer wanted to be friends with Skylar so they had killed her, dumping her body in the Pennsylvania woods. Both were sentenced to prison and are still there.

Wisconsin

  • Crime: Jeffrey Dahmer’s crimes between 1978 and 1991

Jeffrey Dahmer cruised gay bars, malls, and bus stops, looking for men and boys he could lure to his home with promises of sex or money. But the men, mostly African-American, were strangled to death instead. Dahmer kept grisly reminders of his victims, such as skulls, and in some later cases ate some of their flesh or had sex with their dead bodies. All told, Dahmer killed 17 men and boys. Sentenced to 16 life terms, Dahmer was killed by another inmate in 1995.

Wyoming

  • Crime: Murder of gay student Matthew Shepard in 1998

When openly gay student Matthew Shepard walked into a bar in Laramie, he chatted up two patrons, Russell Henderson and Aaron McKinney. Rather than seeing him as a new friend, the two men hatched a plan to kill the 21-year-old slightly built Shepard. After driving out of town with him, the two brutally beat Shepard and tied him to a fence in the frigid cold.

He died five days after he was discovered with four skull fractures and a crushed brain stem. Henderson and McKinney are serving two consecutive life terms for kidnapping and murder in what authorities believe was a hate crime against gay people. Although tragic, Shepard’s murder propelled the LGBTQ rights movement into national prominence.

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