• What Happened When Enietra Washington Saw the Grim Sleeper's Polaroid of Her?
    Jun 19 2026

    Twenty-two years after Lonnie Franklin Jr. shot her, Enietra Washington was shown a Polaroid photograph. It was her — twenty-seven years old, unconscious, bleeding from a gunshot wound to the chest, slumped in the passenger seat of an orange Ford Pinto. Franklin had taken it as a trophy and stored it in his garage alongside over a thousand other photos of women.

    The Grim Sleeper killed at least ten women in South LA between 1985 and 2007. He was caught through familial DNA in 2010 — twenty-five years after his first confirmed kill. The LAPD had known about the serial pattern since 1988 and concealed it from the public for two decades.

    Enietra's words from the witness stand in 2016: "You are truly a piece of evil. You're right up there with Manson." Her words from 2022: "I don't consider myself a survivor. I'm a conqueror." The final episode of Surviving Serial Killers on History's Hidden Killers — the most damning institutional failure in the entire series.

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    This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

    #EnietraWashington #GrimSleeper #LonnieFranklin #SurvivingSerialKillers #HistorysHiddenKillers #TrueCrime #LAPD #SouthLA #TrueCrimePodcast #JusticeServed

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    14 Min.
  • Did Cindy Paulson Know Robert Hansen Was Flying Women Into the Alaskan Wilderness?
    Jun 18 2026

    She didn't know about the wilderness or the rifle or the map with the X's. What Cindy Paulson knew was that wherever Robert Hansen's Cessna was going, she was not coming back. She ran barefoot in handcuffs across Merrill Field, flagged a driver on the highway, and led police to the exact spot where Hansen's plane was still parked.

    Hansen's method was specific and horrifying — he flew women to remote Alaskan wilderness, released them, and hunted them like game. He did it for over a decade. He confessed to seventeen murders. And Cindy Paulson, at seventeen years old, handed police everything they needed to stop him. They didn't act.

    The hidden history in this episode isn't the killing — it's the decision not to listen. A girl's word weighed less than a baker's reputation. That calculus has a body count. Surviving Serial Killers on History's Hidden Killers — who gets believed and who doesn't.

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    #CindyPaulson #RobertHansen #ButcherBaker #SurvivingSerialKillers #HistorysHiddenKillers #TrueCrime #Alaska #TrueCrimePodcast #FrozenGround #JusticeServed

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    14 Min.
  • What Did Holly Dunn's Boyfriend Say Before the Railroad Killer Took His Life?
    Jun 17 2026

    Five words. "Everything is going to be okay." Chris Maier said them on his knees, hands bound, staring at a man with a fifty-two-pound rock. He said them to Holly Dunn. He was twenty-one. He was dead within minutes. Holly wasn't.

    The Railroad Killer — Angel Maturino Reséndiz — was eventually linked to at least fifteen murders across six states. Holly was the only known survivor. She crawled two hundred yards with a shattered jaw and a fractured eye socket to get help. She testified at trial. Reséndiz was executed in Texas in 2006.

    But Holly Dunn's story doesn't end with the verdict. It ends with Holly's House — a center in Evansville, Indiana, built for people who have survived their worst day. She turned five words from a dying boyfriend into a life's work. Surviving Serial Killers on History's Hidden Killers tells the story behind the building.

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    #HollyDunn #ChrisMaier #RailroadKiller #SurvivingSerialKillers #HistorysHiddenKillers #TrueCrime #FBIMostWanted #Kentucky #TrueCrimePodcast #HollysHouse

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    13 Min.
  • What Did Corazon Amurao Do After She Pointed at Richard Speck in Court?
    Jun 16 2026

    She crossed the courtroom. She walked directly at Richard Speck. She stopped close enough to touch him. And she said: "This is the man." Then Corazon Amurao disappeared from public life for sixty years.

    On the night of July 13, 1966, Speck killed eight of her roommates in a Chicago townhouse. Corazon survived by hiding under a bed for six hours while he worked room by room. Her description of his "Born to Raise Hell" tattoo identified him within days. Her testimony convicted him.

    But the real story isn't the trial. It's what she did afterward — or rather, what she refused to do. She went home to the Philippines. She turned down every book, every interview, every film deal. She chose silence over spectacle and carried eight names quietly for the rest of her life. Surviving Serial Killers on History's Hidden Killers tells the story the world almost never heard.

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    #CorazonAmurao #RichardSpeck #SurvivingSerialKillers #HistorysHiddenKillers #TrueCrime #Chicago #NurseMurders #TrueCrimePodcast #CrimeOfTheCentury #JusticeServed

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    14 Min.
  • Did Lisa McVey Trick Bobby Joe Long Into Letting Her Go?
    Jun 15 2026

    She told him she'd be his secret girlfriend. She told him her father was dying and she was his only caretaker. She asked him questions to build rapport. She was seventeen years old, blindfolded, in a serial killer's apartment — and she was running a psychological operation designed to keep herself alive. Every word Lisa McVey said to Bobby Joe Long during those twenty-six hours was calculated. And it worked.

    Long had already killed at least eight women across Tampa Bay. He confessed to ten murders total. But Lisa McVey survived because she identified the one crack in his psychology — a single word in his threats — and exploited it until he drove her home and apologized.

    The series premiere of Surviving Serial Killers tells the story most people have never heard in full. Not just the kidnapping, but the suicide note she wrote hours before. The three years of horror at home that prepared her, in the worst possible way, for what Long did. The sergeant who rescued her from both. And the execution she attended thirty-five years later with a T-shirt that said everything: "Long... Overdue."

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    #LisaMcVey #BobbyJoeLong #SurvivingSerialKillers #HistorysHiddenKillers #TrueCrime #SerialKillerSurvivor #Tampa #TrueCrimePodcast #ColdCase #JusticeServed

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    15 Min.
  • How Did A Church Council Meeting Agenda End BTK's Run?
    Jun 12 2026

    On February 16, 2005, a purple Memorex floppy disk arrived at KSAS-TV in Wichita. The disk had been mailed by Dennis Rader. It contained a Microsoft Word file titled Test A.RTF. The file's content was unremarkable. The file's metadata was not.

    The metadata showed two things. The file had been last saved on a computer at Christ Lutheran Church in Park City, Kansas. The user account that had saved it was named Dennis. Wichita Police called the church. The pastor, Michael Clark, confirmed there was a council member named Dennis. He confirmed it was Dennis Rader, the church's council president.

    The case ended in a single phone call.

    For BTK case followers, this fifth and final chapter of host Tony Brueski's investigation walks through the entire trap Lieutenant Ken Landwehr built over the eleven months of Rader's 2004 communications. The classified ad system Landwehr used to engage Rader through the Wichita Eagle. The lie Landwehr placed in the ad that read "Rex, it will be OK." Rader's typewritten cereal-box question asking whether a floppy disk could be traced. The forty-day gap between the question and the disk. The DNA confirmation from Rader's daughter Kerri's medical records, obtained under warrant without her knowledge or consent. The February 25 arrest at Rader's compliance officer truck near his Park City home. The thirty-plus-hour confession in which Rader corrected detectives when their facts were slightly off and asked, at one point, if they wanted him to draw a diagram.

    The August 18, 2005, sentencing. The hour-long courtroom speech. Judge Greg Waller's ten consecutive life sentences. The closing roll call of the ten people Dennis Rader killed, named in order. The five uncomfortable truths the series exists to put on the record.

    He caught himself.


    END LINKS

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    DISCLAIMER

    This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.


    HASHTAGS

    #BTK #DennisRader #ChristLutheran #FloppyDisk #BTKArrest #KenLandwehr #BTKCase #SerialKillers #ColdCase #HiddenKillers

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    22 Min.
  • Why Did BTK Wear A 'POLICE' Rain Slicker On His City Job?
    Jun 11 2026

    In his fourteen years as the compliance officer for the city of Park City, Kansas, Dennis Rader designed a rain slicker for himself with the word POLICE printed across the back. He wore it on the job. He was not a police officer. He did not have arrest authority. His authority extended to grass height, junked vehicles, and other municipal code matters.

    The Park City police chief made him stop wearing the POLICE slicker. Rader's quoted response, in his own words: fine, put DOGCATCHER on it instead.

    In this third chapter of a five-part BTK investigation built specifically for case followers, host Tony Brueski walks through every official role Dennis Rader chose for himself and what each one actually gave him in operational terms. The ADT alarm installer position from 1974 to 1988. The Cub Scout pack leader role. The Christ Lutheran Church council seat that rose to council president. The Sedgwick County Board of Zoning Appeals seat. The Animal Control Advisory Board. The compliance officer truck with city plates and the legal authority to enter private property for code inspection without a warrant.

    The episode also walks through Rader's own confession description of his pre-killing reconnaissance method. He called it "trolling." Driving neighborhoods. Watching women. Mapping schedules. Picking houses. He had been doing it on his own time since the late 1960s. After 1991, the city of Park City put him on the public payroll to do exactly that, on the clock, with a badge.

    This is the third uncomfortable truth of the series. Dennis Rader did not need a separate hunting identity. The official roles he volunteered for gave him every legal permission and every community trust the hunting required. The costumes were not the cover. The costumes were the access.


    END LINKS

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    DISCLAIMER

    This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.


    HASHTAGS

    #BTK #DennisRader #ComplianceOfficer #BTKCase #ParkCity #SerialKillers #ColdCase #BTKKiller #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers

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    20 Min.
  • Did BTK Walk Home From Killing His Own Neighbor?
    Jun 11 2026

    In April of 1985, Marine Hedge was killed in her own bedroom in Park City, Kansas. She was sixty-three years old. She lived alone. Her body was found a week later in a ditch outside town.

    Marine Hedge lived on Independence Street. Dennis Rader lived on Independence Street. They were neighbors. On the night Rader killed her, he walked from her front door to his own back door. He went home. He went to bed.

    Park City Police investigated Marine Hedge's death. They did not connect her case to BTK. BTK was understood as a Wichita killer. Marine Hedge died in Park City. Different agency. Different file. The man who had killed her would not be officially connected to her death by anybody in law enforcement until he confessed to it himself, twenty years later, in 2005.

    For BTK case followers, this second chapter of Tony Brueski's five-part investigation walks through every confirmed Wichita-era piece of evidence law enforcement had on Dennis Rader and could not assemble. The Bright sketch. The Otero confession letter. The Fox 911 call. The Williams sealed package. The Hedge neighbor case in Park City. The Wegerle case that was filed as a domestic and put a grieving husband under suspicion for eighteen years.

    The episode walks slowly through what Wichita Police had, when they had it, what the legal and jurisdictional constraints of the era looked like, and the specific moments where pieces of Dennis Rader sat in different filing cabinets that no investigator at the time was authorized or able to bring together.

    This is the second uncomfortable truth of the series. The chase didn't close because the cops finally caught him. The chase closed when Dennis Rader, eleven months before his arrest, accidentally handed them the last piece.


    END LINKS

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    DISCLAIMER

    This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.


    HASHTAGS

    #BTK #DennisRader #MarineHedge #BTKCase #BTKKiller #Wichita #ParkCity #SerialKillers #ColdCase #HiddenKillers

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    19 Min.