The Man w⧸ 93 MURDERS: Samuel Little! The MOST Prolific Serial Killer In US History!
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 4 minutes
Words per Minute
167.37024
Summary
Samuel Little was an American serial killer who confessed to murdering 93 women between 1970 and 2005. He is the most prolific serial killer in the history of U.S. history, with at least 93 confirmed victims.
Transcript
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and we are live what's up guys welcome to fed it today we're gonna be covering the most prolific
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serial killer in u.s history man samuel little let's get right into we got a lot to cover
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i was a special agent with homelands investigations okay guys hsi the cases that i did mostly were
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human smuggling and drug trafficking no one else has these documents by the way here's what fed
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covers doctor lofredo confirmed lacerations due to stepping on glass murder investigations
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you don't know and he's positioning been on february 13 2019 you're facing two pounds of
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two meditative murder racketeering and rico conspiracies young slime life here and after
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referred to as ysl the defendant's uh six nine and then this is billy seiko right here now when they
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first started guys six nine ran with i'm a fed i'm watching this music video you know i'm bobbing my
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like hey this shit lit but at the same time i'm pausing oh wait who this right well who's that
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in the back firearms and violent crime aka bush i see violated in order to stay away from the victim
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this is the one that that's gonna fuck him up because this gun is not tracing well it happened
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at the gun range here's your boy 42 dug right here on the left okay sex trafficking and sex
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they can effectively link him to paying an underage girl and the first bomb went off right
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here suspect to shut down a backpack on the site of the second explosion inspired by al-qaeda
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two terrorists brothers the zokar sarnev and tamarland sarnev when the cartels shipped drugs
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into the country as this guy got arrested for um espionage okay trading secrets with the russians
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for monetary compensation the largest corrupt police bust in new orleans history
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so he was in this bad boy we're gonna go over his past the gang time so that this all makes sense
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all right what's up guys welcome back to fed it man so as you guys know i ran a poll on instagram
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earlier this week and i asked you guys which serial killer you guys wanted me to cover
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and overwhelmingly i think it was around 55 percent of you guys wanted samuel little uh just
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so y'all know he has the most confirmed kills in u.s history as far as serial killer goes
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i tied him back to i think 93 and 60 of those were confirmed by the fbi so you guys are probably
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wondering who the hell is this guy here he is right here share screen with y'all this is samuel little
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guys um samuel little born mcdowell samuel mcdowell was what he was born as june 7th 1940 died december
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30th 2020 so approximately two years ago he passed away was an american serial killer who confessed
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to murdering 93 women between 1970 and 2005 and 2014 he was convicted of the murders of linda
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alfred guadalupe duarte uh apodaca and audrey nelson everett and in 2018 for the murder of denise
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christie brothers the federal bureau of investigation fbi's violent criminal apprehension program vikap
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has confirmed littles involvement and at least 60 of the 93 confessed murders the largest number of
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confirmed victims for any serial killer in united states history guys you guys can see here is a
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picture of him in 2012 uh he's born in renal georgia died in los angeles county california at the age
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of 80 um and here's his nicknames samuel mcdowell the choke and stroke killer mr sam choking stroke
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that's a first i never heard that one before and then uh known for being the most prolific serial
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killer in united states history by a number of confirmed victims okay uh so yeah that's who
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that's who he is guys um so let's go ahead and get into a documentary that i have for y'all
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okay and this is samuel little most prolific serial killer in u.s history this comes from law and crime
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network a pretty good channel here that makes some good content um without further ado let's get right
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into it in 1970 a woman is strangled to death and buried in a shallow grave out in florida
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from there for the next 35 years bodies would be found across different states
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it would take decades before these cases would be solved and finally connected to one man
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she was and of course guys when did he go crazy in the 1970s as you guys know we've talked about
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this before a lot of serial killers most of the most prolific ones you know your ted bunnies your
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jeffrey domers your john wayne gacy's night stalker um etc the green river killer who i'm going to cover
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later on the toy box killer all these guys operated between 19 the zodiac killer right they operated from
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the 1960s to about the 1990s and the reason why for that guys is because dna evidence was not uh used
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by you know the law the law enforcement world until uh i think the first case that they ever used it was
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in the late 80s and then they actually didn't start using it in a mainstream sense until the 90s guys so
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um btk right which they ended up catching him because of dna so a lot of these serial killers went crazy
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uh in between the 1960s uh in between the 1960s to 1990s and samuel little definitely was one of
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them he was he was doing it uh as you guys can see in the 1970s was his prime time pretty a light
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skin brown honey colored candle this is samuel little also known as samuel mcdowell i'm there in
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in a nightclub in new orleans so i cut off i took off the exit went and that sure enough
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was the road leading into the woods and we went in and he may not look like much when investigators
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began interviewing him in 2018 in his late 70s and suffering from health conditions but the man
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you're seeing was the most prolific serial killer in united states history i grabbed my legs and pulled
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to the water and this interview is an interview he did with texas rangers
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and fbi uh agents and uh i think he did this in la then this was in 2018 with uh some of the
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murders that he confessed to that they weren't able to identify who the victims were
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that's the only one and look at how he speaks so calmly about it i killed my job that's just one
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confession of many that little provided to authorities after his capture at the then age of 71. i've never in
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my life ever interviewed another killer like that in my career you know you first see him he's this
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little old man in a wheelchair that will remind me of the little man on a porch rocking in a chair
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telling you his stories about his life although his stories were demented north little rock tell me
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what that girl looked like oh man i loved her she was a heavy set big old yellow yeah they had buck teeth
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they had a gap to me and he made that sketch himself guys he actually went back and sketched
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a bunch of the women that he killed that weren't identified so um the fact that he's able to remember
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this decades after the fact and recall details like this speaks to this guy's um character crazy
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dude there was no remorse whatsoever it was a matter of fact i got him to kill he went into great detail
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on his promise oh the only thing i know in all is that and that was your intent that was my intent
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sam little ultimately confessed to 93 murders from 1970 to 2005. that's more than ted bundy the zodiac
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killer and the golden state killer combined holy god damn this dude bro oh killing people all over the
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place um and i will cover the golden state killer for y'all and this guy also was known as the
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original night stalker before richard ramirez um a lot of you guys requested him so i'll cover him as
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well he also came back and got caught because of dna about 40 years after the fact um and as you guys
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know i did a whole podcast on the zodiac killer i would argue the zodiac killer is the most infamous
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serial killer in u.s history um to this day still unsolved i know that the case break the cold case
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breakers came out and said that they think they know who it is um you know there's two to three
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really good suspects in it but we'll see what happens and of course i covered ted bundy who um
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most the first televised murder in u.s history um 33 confirmed killer murders all across the united
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states from california to oregon to um excuse me washington state uh colorado utah florida etc they
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ended up catching him because he left a bite mark on a girl's buttocks that he killed at a college
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sorority house um in florida ended up catching him and you know a forensic orthodontist was able to tie
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um his teeth back to the marks from the victim and on top of that he actually represented himself
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in court which is wild um and he escaped prison twice as well so i did a whole breakdown on all of
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these guys except for the golden state killers so if you guys want to go ahead and do this watch the
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zodiac one that's a very thorough breakdown i go over all the murders and then the ted bundy one
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of course i go into detail uh with his murders how he escaped prison twice um him representing himself
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in court uh but that is wild that sam little has more kills than all these guys right here if i'm not
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mistaken ted bunny had 33 um the zodiac had five confirmed even though he bragged about 37
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and then if i'm not mistaken this guy the golden state killer had 13 confirmed murders and i think
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50 rapes that's what made him uh notorious is he break into people's houses and rape them
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um but i will go ahead and break him break his case down for y'all in the future as well
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we know of at least 93 women who were murdered he was not going to stop he actually told police that
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he found it sexually satisfying to rape and kill women in order to really understand sam little's
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reign of terror let's first dig into the killings themselves like many serial killers sam little
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had an mo did you ever shoot any of these girls shoot yeah with a gun
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so everything was done by manual so it's as usual strangulation right a lot of these serial killers
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don't like shooting and killing their victims are there some that do it yeah i mean you know
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richard ramirez for example he didn't give a shit he would stab shoot strangle etc but some other guys
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like samuel little for example um took great pride and manually strangling their victims and a lot of
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the times by their own hands you know uh jeffrey dahmer same way john wayne gacy used to use the um
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the tourniquet knot uh to go ahead and and uh tie up his individuals and strangle them um and uh who
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else ted bundy enjoyed strangling so most of these serial killers strangle and this guy was no different
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strangulation did you ever use like a belt or a cloth or no barrots no ligatures at all my hands
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just your hands without that i wouldn't want to do it he would so he actually used his hands some
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other serial killers used ropes and you know btk used ropes he'd put bags over their head and choke
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them out this guy strictly uses hands on that demon time right there man
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take his hands and he would put them on their throats and he would choke them and sometimes he would
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allow them to uh revive so he could see the fear in their eyes before choking them out
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it was squeezing hard enough for the breath we could be cut off and sooner or later she
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started catching breath and that's when she tried to pull up my hands off it was too late man
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was it exciting to you at the time yeah and and um you know this is very common with a lot of these
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serial killers guys where they'll strangle their victim watch them pass out and then let go let
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them come back to life and then do it again right ted bundy used to do this john wain gacy used to do
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this uh btk used to do this um now samuel little like a lot of these guys really enjoy playing god
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while torturing their victims right it's a very um it's a very sick mindset because for once right
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a lot of these serial killers come from fucked up backgrounds where they weren't really able to
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control their circumstances when they're murdering their victims it's one of the rare situations where
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they are in total control and they have they have this god element to them and they are in control of
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that person's destiny and a lot of them get great sexual satisfaction and great uh joy from this as
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sick as that sounds so that is why so many of them like to strangle um sometimes stab etc
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they're victims because it's personal and they get to feel like god
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he's a sadistic killer for sure he wanted to feel like their neck swallowing and i think his foreplay
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basically he would take a lot of them to eat and they would go eat and swallow and drink and i think
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that was his foreplay that's what got him excited is watching that neck so how was it that little was
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able to commit dozens of rapes and murders without getting caught the reason sam little went undetected
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for so many years is because of who he targeted primarily drug addicted women and sex workers
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i didn't know who the hell would do it yeah i don't go back to the same citizen time
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this is key guys as to why this guy wasn't caught for so long
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he refers to them as grapes you guys could see how callous this guy is right and he specifically
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went after a certain demographic of woman to keep himself from getting caught he knew which women
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would be not cared about he knew which women would not be missed he knew which women would be susceptible
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to his advances whether they're romantic or he was providing them drugs or providing them alcohol
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he knew which women on the lower levels of our society he could actually lure into his car to take
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to a secluded place to quickly kill them in the dead of night where nobody could see him and then to
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dump their body immediately and get out of dodge this is how he got away with it and i'm not just saying
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he says no you didn't you didn't get in out there with the people that will be immediately missed
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yeah and very important to either family or business or somebody yeah you got pretty good at
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knowing which one step i'm not going to go over in the white neighborhood and pick out a little
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love young teenage girl or like the movies do you know and that's how little god and that's that right
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there guys i mean you could see from his mindset like i'm not going to go take one of these white
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girls from the neighborhoods or someone that's going to get missed i'm going to go after people
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that no one cares about i'm going to go ahead and go after you know minority prostitutes in crime
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ridden areas where no one's going to miss them no one's going to care no one's going to go looking for
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them after they go missing and that was a key to him being able to do this for so long and on top
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that he was a vagrant he was traveling all over the place he was you know living in many different
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states driving from state to state um and you know a lot of people some some criminologists theorize
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that the rise of serial killers in the united states is directly tied to the interstate highway
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system and i would agree with that because you know if you're you know if you commit a crime in a
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little town a little area and then you jump on that highway when you go to another state well
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that police department right is going to be virtually powerless to really stop you because
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you know number one back then they didn't work with other agencies number two technology was limited
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number three there was no central databases to allow law enforcement agencies to communicate with
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each other um there wasn't uh you know dna wasn't a thing fingerprints were really the only main way
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and sometimes that was even limited and forensic um forensic uh testing and all this other stuff
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was in its infant stages if if if it was even being used so uh interstate highways right allowed
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serial killers to be able to commit a crime get out of dodge and that police department a lot of times
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was powerless to do anything and i've told you guys before the agencies that typically conduct
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murder investigations are the state and local agencies this is how guys like ted bundy right
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were able to wreak havoc in different states and no one knew what the hell was going on he was able to
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travel to for you know from washington state to idaho to i think he had one or two kills in california
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um colorado utah florida etc they were he was able to do this thanks to interstate highway
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system and before the refinement of law enforcement database systems that allowed agencies to
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communicate with each other so um you know little was no different his biggest thing was he preyed upon
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minority prostitutes as well which added another layer of insulation to keep him from detection
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over and over again and because he did this secret because he did this same mo over and over again he got
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very good at it coming up little had spent his life in and out of prison and had almost been captured
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before so what happened i've been lucky on a number of times yeah he got arrested almost 100 times by the
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the way guys wild stuff i wanted to be the vaccine we're concealed so she was already dead in the car
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yeah okay after samuel little is arrested in 2012 on a narcotics charge investigators realize he's
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actually responsible for several cold case killings little would ultimately confess to 93 murders prior to
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his capture though little was a man who had been arrested almost a hundred times and only spent a total
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of 10 years behind bars so how was he not connected to these crimes sooner and more importantly how was
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he look at all these mug shots through the times guys been arrested damn near every year it's like his
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annual checkup going to going and getting arrested still on the streets for all this time i was looking
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in front of him i had a dead body in the car i had a dead body in the car that's when we get the
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joked out yes that i'm getting wrecked but blue blue blue blue lights everywhere poor he's calling to come
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back behind the building he's seen a spark there i jumped out of the car and tried to act like i'm zipping
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my pants he said oh where are the photos what's going on over here i said nothing i said me and my wife
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just covered this course which is a damn car look in that window with a flashlight i'm telling you
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shouting right on the girl she lay up there like that she's dead yeah and as soon as he was looking
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in there i said yeah right here i got his mind off jason he took a second look and i got away like that
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he said what the hell police officer down there in florida god damn he had just finished killing
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somebody police officer comes up on the scene doesn't realize that it's a dead woman lets him go wow
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the police weren't able to put together a strong case against him because he
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he himself knew how to get away without leaving a lot of evidence i never cut stamp burn
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bit but no nothing i know blood i don't like blood he would initially strike he doesn't like blood
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oh man but i guess he likes choking his victims in the head and then strangle them and i think
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ultimately when you think about this you're not going to have any forensic evidence later the
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bodies have deteriorated not to mention this guy had some um had some fighting skills if i'm not
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mistaken sam little did have some boxing training guys so he would hit the girl without her noticing
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right that you know because he'd pick up a prostitute she'd think oh yeah this guy's very charming
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whatever i mean when he was younger he wasn't a bad-looking dude you know it's not common to run across a
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african-american guy that has like yeah like greenish blue eyes right obviously that's going to be very
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distinct you know girls like that type of thing whatever pause and uh you know he picked them up
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you know he charm them whatever they'd go out to eat or whatever he typically would take his victims
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to go have something to eat and kind of a sicko but he would watch them eat and he'd look at their
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throat that's what he liked was watching their throat on some evil time shit right and then when
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he got him back in his car and they'd be driving he was just like bam just punch her right in the face
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right and she wouldn't even see it coming sometimes knock her out cold and then he would strangle her
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so a lot of these ladies didn't even see it coming when you would hit him but he would just strike them
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one time bam you know and as a trained fighter that's all it takes so there were no markings there
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were no you couldn't see knife wounds to bones you could not see gunshot bullets there was no fractures
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in these bodies i found about pig farmers oh and that's how the girl they found a girl that landed
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the field next to the big farm all the mother in the office the rats got over there
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sam little would dispose of bodies in the everglades he would roll them down hills he would put them in
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densely forested areas he was like partially concealed by vegetation left for there dna didn't really start
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being utilized until the mid 1990s so he was able to to get away with any type of sexual crimes alabama
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and also i want to make a note here guys i don't know if you guys are noticing it
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you know the two people that are conducting the interview with sam you know they're agreeing with
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him they're using the same terminology black pluck them right etc i know some of you guys might be
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like well that's disturbing you guys got to understand that when you're interviewing criminals
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right you need to identify with them and a lot of the times that comes from sympathizing with them
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using their own terminology making jokes you know they talked about college football etc when they're
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talking with him you need to be able to build rapport and a lot of times building rapport with these
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criminals you have to get into their mind and you have to think how they think a lot of times that's
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going to put you in a mindset where and say things that might be seemed as deplorable on the outside but
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for you to get a full confession for you to get the information that you want you have to identify with them
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okay so just understand that these investigators are sympathizing with them as a technique to garner information
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even though he had 100 arrests and served only 10 years prison time i would blame partially the
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criminal justice system because a lot of the cases against him were dismissed they weren't followed up
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with and he was fleeing constantly he was very transient and leaving to different areas cities across the
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nation little had had close calls before but nothing may have come as close as to when he was directly
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tied to two brutal murders you know we caught him we believed he was responsible for melinda lucree's murder
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in 1982 and we know absolutely he was responsible for patricia mount's case now when you're driving
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around with patricia mount in the front passenger seat did you have any conversation with her
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my mind was only killing her she let me fill the throat of caressing and before i knew it i uh
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tightened my hands right after patricia mount's nude body was found in that hayfield hair fibers
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and witness testimony linked little to the killing and he went on trial yet once again it was little's
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lucky day the jury found him not guilty as for melinda lucree a grand jury l prosecution man l prosecution
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opted not to indict him other media has come to us saying you know if y'all had just tried him and he
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was in jail all these people would be alive and i will tell you that melinda lucree had been out in
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elements for over three weeks um and if you saw a picture of of her remains you would understand there
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there were no evidence there to gain there were so many things so many times that uh he was arrested
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for for assaulting women and the women were ladies of the night they were on drugs those don't make the
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best witnesses unfortunately a combination of lack of hard evidence issues with witnesses and little's
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own ways of covering up his crimes resulted in weak cases and him continually striking plea deals
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for shorter prison stints jillian lauren a new york times best-selling author and someone who spent
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hours interviewing sam little has made it her mission to be the voice of these victims because of
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the fact that they were often prostitutes often drug addicts often women of color um women who were
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considered unimportant or as some cops used to talk about the women who were turning up in south central
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dead almost every morning in the 80s um uh nhi no humans involved but you know it wasn't just cops he
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was tried by a jury of his peers once again it's us who let him go up next little's crime spree comes to
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an end but his story is just beginning i had a strong desire to kill her
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and she played with you a little bit on the way out there and you killed her in the car yes i would
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samuel little who's come to be known as the most prolific serial killer in united states history
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and whose crime spree spanned from 1970 to 2005 was able to elude justice for years that is until
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2012. prosecutors and the police were never able to actually pin a case on him until he left his dna
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california actually had a case where they had run dna on a cold case and they had an identical case or one
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that was a similar mo and when they tested that dna the dna came back to a identical person in sam
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little in spam obviously this took years to do but that's the power of dna especially with cracking
00:28:24.780
the serial killer cases because you guys got to remember a lot of the times the victims are random
00:28:30.300
so you know motive is difficult to to figure out um a methodology uh all the only thing you could
00:28:37.260
really look at is like pattern so dna is critical because it's very difficult to tie a serial killer
00:28:44.540
to a victim because the victims are random a lot of times
00:28:49.900
september 2012 little was arrested in a homeless shelter in kentucky on an outstanding california drug
00:28:55.900
charge when he was extradited back to l.a investigators such as detective mitzi roberts
00:29:01.820
were able to link little's dna to material leftic crime scenes in the 1980s i was already putting
00:29:08.460
together a sample case because i was working all the cold cases here in my area in mississippi uh los
00:29:15.340
angeles mitchy roberts called asking do we have anything about a sam little case so she came down
00:29:20.860
interviewed our witnesses to put together a method uh an mo of of the killer sam lull uh it fit
00:29:28.940
everything with their cases in 2014 little and that's the power with technology and agencies
00:29:35.340
working together sharing information oh this is your mo this is my mo holy this is the same guy
00:29:39.900
this is my crime scene this is your crime scene what you find in your crime scene this is what i
00:29:42.700
found in mine and this is the power when agencies work together and are able to piece information
00:29:47.500
and piece of evidence together to link it to one suspect who was convicted of the murders of three
00:29:52.460
of his victims carol alford audrey nelson and guadalupe apodaca but in a way little was also
00:30:00.140
answering for all the women he had killed they were human beings and that they were all totally different
00:30:09.820
in september 2014 little was sentenced to three consecutive life terms in prison without the
00:30:15.420
possibility of parole while little had maintained his innocence his whole life in 2018 he finally
00:30:22.940
decided to open up to investigators it's so good to meet you and i'd like to personally thank you
00:30:30.780
for being generous enough with your time i hope that feels solid when somebody is incarcerated and they
00:30:39.180
know they're spending their life in jail their communication with the outside world is in essence
00:30:45.980
you're so valuable to society at this point i think i'm worth something to these people
00:30:51.660
that's plans to the serial killer's ego to get the confession
00:30:57.980
he opened up because it was his exit strategy this was again part of his overall plan this guy definitely
00:31:05.740
was ready to talk as soon as he knew he wasn't going to be receiving the death penalty that's the letter
00:31:11.740
that he requested that our state attorney will not pursue the death penalty under any circumstance
00:31:17.260
and that is a very big bargaining chip with a lot of these serial killers is they'll confess to their
00:31:21.500
murders and give information you know under the pretense that they are not executed and and ted
00:31:27.660
bundy tried this uh but they ended up executing him anyway he tried to you know get a last attempt
00:31:32.700
to save himself and uh no they weren't playing around in florida and that what ended up getting him
00:31:37.100
executed was he killed a i think a 13 year old little girl which is pretty sick how we did it
00:31:41.740
um but you guys can go ahead and check it out on the other episode i did on ted bunny where i break
00:31:46.380
down all those uh crimes now the question became how do you get little to open up i'd love to talk
00:31:53.500
to you about games a little bit you know that's that's where i live and work i'm not i'm not a
00:31:57.500
gator fan i'll tell you right now you must be ohio state right you know i heard and did for our
00:32:03.260
gators though sports is a huge way to build rapport with a lot of these crooks guys i
00:32:08.620
hate sports but when i used to interview suspects i would talk sports with these guys i'd get you know
00:32:13.100
aware of espn i knew what the hell was going on so i'd be able to talk sports with these guys and build
00:32:17.260
rapport because a lot of the times you have to befriend these guys first it's not like the movies
00:32:22.300
where you know you go in there and you shine the spotlight on their face hey tell me everything i
00:32:27.500
need to know no that's not how things go nope you need to go in there a lot of times it's building
00:32:31.900
rapport talking about stuff that has nothing to do with the crime at all and then you know slowly
00:32:37.900
getting into the criminal stuff but yeah man i remember there were interviews where i'd go in
00:32:42.460
there and i'd talk with them about random stuff sports hobbies going to the gym girls womanizing
00:32:50.300
whatever the hell it is for 45 minutes plus you know hour and a half talking just shooting the
00:32:55.500
about life yeah you know where they've traveled where they've been before i even get into the
00:33:00.460
criminal stuff you know and that's what it takes a lot of times to get the best information is they
00:33:05.980
want to like you first before they tell you you know some devious things they used to do
00:33:11.980
that yeah now you were a usc fan too or no no no i can't stand california see at least he's right
00:33:22.620
about that california trash but you lived down in california for a while i don't believe that
00:33:27.020
several times going to be littles interview for sure i wanted to make sure that myself as a prosecutor
00:33:33.900
was uh going to be somebody that he wouldn't mind talking to we knew that he liked the cleveland
00:33:40.380
brands he's from the cleveland area we're from the cleveland and so that kind of uh was our cash if you
00:33:47.900
will uh to be able to build this report with him what do you remember about her told him and talked
00:33:55.260
how i did it i talked to him straight i told him he's a big perv i told him i didn't agree with
00:34:03.500
him he would say all right so that right there guys is not how you you know build rapport with
00:34:09.820
criminals and get information which of course you know she's an angry feminist that doesn't
00:34:14.300
know any better so of course she's going to go in there with her emotions stupid and try to get
00:34:18.940
some information but at that point by the time she had interviewed him he had already come clean to
00:34:22.780
law enforcement so it's like whatever i'll give your bimbo ass uh you know an explanation as well
00:34:27.820
but um you don't want to go in there with emotion and fuck you and also the bullshit it doesn't work
00:34:33.740
that way you know what i mean you got to go in there and you have to identify and sympathize with
00:34:38.060
these guys that's how you get confessions but i'm not surprised that an emotional feminist would go
00:34:43.420
in there and say some stupid shit like you're a big perv like duh dummy we know that if you want to go
00:34:49.660
ahead and get the most information shut your mouth listen to what the guy has to say calling
00:34:53.500
them names typically never helps call me a perverted homicidal maniac and i said well that's like
00:35:00.060
certainly one of the things i'd call you and he was just like whatever you're a hoe i was mostly
00:35:07.660
she belongs to the streets you probably wasn't far off that she's a 304 but that's a whole other
00:35:12.940
conversation coming up little may have confessed to numerous murders but how do we know if he was
00:35:21.900
telling the truth more when we return i think all court shows are the same we're talking about
00:35:31.420
after serial killer samuel little was finally caught in 2012 and convicted of murdering three
00:35:43.580
women back in the 1980s he decided to confess to more of his crimes from 1970 to 2005 and that's when
00:35:51.740
the floodgates opened so i killed a girl there in ocala
00:36:00.620
she also talked about a young lady that she jumped down a stairwell yeah that was a white girl yeah she
00:36:09.660
was like i got out of the car pulled her out and drove her into groups back then little ended up
00:36:21.340
confessing to killing 93 people and would ultimately plead guilty to several more murders how do we know
00:36:27.900
though that little was actually telling the truth i am this is actually very smart what they did here to
00:36:34.540
see if he was actually telling the truth because a lot of the times guys these serial killers will
00:36:39.580
you know let's be honest here we covered btk we covered the zodiac killer you know a lot of these
00:36:44.460
guys are clout chasers man they do anything for clout right and letters to the police the media i'm
00:36:49.020
the killer taking credit for crazy shit that they may or may not have done um people love to be you
00:36:55.420
know get attention to be recognized and people do anything for clout as uh offset famously said with
00:37:00.380
cardi b right so they have to establish all right he's coming forward with all these murders
00:37:06.140
93 is a lot let's see if we could throw a curveball here and see if this guy is telling the truth so
00:37:11.900
this was very intelligent what they did here absolutely believe in his credibility of the
00:37:18.300
stories that he told he knew everything about my crime in 1982 and then the 1977 remains actually had
00:37:25.260
a wig on nobody knew that but the anthropologist and us and he talks about she had a wig and he threw it
00:37:30.860
out the window if he killed our our very first victim in one other case he was able to tell what the
00:37:37.100
last item that a lady had eaten was basically the carrots out of a salad and brown coffee and the
00:37:45.660
autopsy report shows undone yesterday carrots and brown coffee and that also was from the 70s holy
00:37:51.580
god damn it's pretty damn accurate remembers her eating carrots and coffee and that's what they found
00:37:56.620
on the autopsy it would have been dark for you so i don't know how these pictures can really help
00:38:01.100
you no i don't that must be blank yes and that's also a telltale sign as well guys is whenever the
00:38:08.460
criminal is able to identify things that only the police and the crook would know that's when they
00:38:13.340
know all right this is our guy for example the zodiac killer i explained to y'all one time he killed a cabbie
00:38:17.980
right and he ripped off a piece of his shirt and sent it to the uh to the uh to the newspaper
00:38:24.540
and he attached a piece of the bloody shirt there so that's how they knew holy crap this is the real
00:38:29.020
killer so that's what a lot of times the killers will do to show i'm the real deal because let's
00:38:35.020
be honest here if it's a notorious killer people are cloud chases they'll come in and say oh yeah it
00:38:38.380
was me that did it and uh you know they don't show any proof how did you remember that it was also
00:38:47.100
important what little said he didn't do we were all sitting around talking and the detective says yeah
00:38:53.340
you know he killed mine he drew a picture over and i said what year was yours and he said 1998.
00:38:58.460
i said no i said he was not out in 1998. so when they go into the interview room and this detective
00:39:05.260
is starting to talk to him about that case and i'm thinking golly if sam little confessed us to
00:39:10.780
killing this one that's going to throw this whole story in the in the brink i mean it just none of
00:39:15.660
it was going to be true and you know he looked at him oh yeah i remember yes but i didn't kill that
00:39:21.980
one he said i was gonna kill her he said i came back to kill her but she was gone i couldn't find
00:39:29.260
it then i said well sam could have took bradley for one did not and um and so they told me he's not
00:39:35.900
out there just just trying to get numbers he's out there wanting to talk about his cases now we get a
00:39:40.940
sense of his oh bam that right there that's an enormous amount of credibility because even when
00:39:46.300
shown uh a murder and the detective thought he might be the suspect he was like nope that that
00:39:52.460
body's not mine i thought about killing her i knew who she was when i came back i couldn't find her
00:39:57.260
so um so that you know adds a tremendous amount of credibility to show okay this guy isn't just in
00:40:03.020
it for the numbers in the club killings but what drove sam little the choking with these women
00:40:09.500
happened before the sex or during or right afterwards what did it mostly happen i choose
00:40:16.780
i picked i choose out first you pick the ones that you think you're going to kill no no if you want
00:40:26.540
so clearly a lot more very very very strange uh it depends on how our net look um so now we're
00:40:33.580
going to get into uh part two of this uh breakdown okay um let's get right into it guys now we're going
00:40:42.220
to get into sam little's background but let's take a step back how did sam little become sam little
00:40:49.820
sometimes to get to the end you have to start at the beginning new york times best-selling author
00:40:55.420
jillian lauren knows that well as she spent hours interviewing and studying little i speak with his family
00:41:02.300
they asked me all the time how did this happen why why why early childhood sexual abuse physical
00:41:08.780
abuse yeah because you were born 1940 right i was born in 1940 yeah okay he went to reform school for
00:41:16.460
stealing a bicycle it's called boys industrial school in ohio his family will also tell me he was
00:41:22.940
he was nothing but trouble even before he went there then he just got that's how you could tell it's old
00:41:29.340
that thing freaking it's all faded that's how you know that you know that's an old ass document
00:41:34.540
abused and abused and abused he grew up in georgia his mother was 16 when she was pregnant and she was
00:41:42.460
in the sex worker industry he talked about his mother his mother had uh had left him on the street corner
00:41:49.340
he was uh uh describing he was so young he was almost a toddler what's really interesting here is the type of
00:41:57.820
victims that he selected and his relationship with his mother the victims that he chose were very
00:42:03.980
vulnerable they were sex workers they were some of them were addicted to drugs these were low-income
00:42:10.380
minority neighborhoods she was an alcoholic and she couldn't catch a trick no more she was she was in
00:42:17.660
a position where a whore that was couldn't do nothing the women in little's life arguably defined him
00:42:24.620
and also shaped his criminal career that includes his longtime girlfriend aurelia jean dorsey you
00:42:32.220
were traveling man all your life right how did you make money to buy cars shoplifting mmo all right so
00:42:39.420
this is how he survived guys because this dude used to travel from state to state which is a big reason
00:42:43.820
why he was able to commit a lot of these crimes we discussed earlier with the interstate system and the
00:42:47.900
rise of serial killers especially um in the 70s all the way to the 90s which actually is when the interstate
00:42:53.820
system was starting to flourish uh but this is how he actually made money and survived
00:42:59.580
jean was uh she was 70 something yeah she about 30 years older than me and he met her in in jail
00:43:09.180
in 1970 and that was who was shoplifting all the goods that allowed him to travel from state to state to
00:43:16.620
state city to city killing these prostitutes so he was a thief by day and a killer by night
00:43:21.660
she's a shoplifter and i was the driver and we'd go all over the country everywhere there
00:43:27.340
i stopped in places overnight in the motels she she's old lady you know and i feel like street
00:43:34.700
looking for a girl that's how i got around so many places from 1971 until dorsey's death in 1988
00:43:42.860
little and dorsey made quite the team whether she realized it or not because of her you were able to
00:43:48.780
kind of go around right because well she had the money coming in yeah she knew you were going out
00:43:54.940
with women yeah as you know my man was finessing he was using that old lady you know shoplifting with
00:44:00.540
her against the money and then going out and killing chicks at night she didn't know that there was like
00:44:05.420
no killing going on oh she didn't know i was going that far she didn't know i was going that far bruh this
00:44:11.660
guy man i kind of wonder if she was this maternal replacement figure and so there was this respect
00:44:20.460
and adoration towards her aside from the reported 47 disciplinary infractions he received at reformatory
00:44:27.820
school in his younger years little was repeatedly arrested for burglaries and even assault however it was
00:44:35.580
in 1970 when things really change the first victim i had was in uh uh his first kill january or february
00:44:47.980
of 1970 by january february of 1970 okay over in miami coconut girl miami yeah first killing did you know
00:44:56.620
that you wanted to tell that you wanted to kill her yeah yeah yeah i had desire strong desire to kill her
00:45:05.420
coming up inside the mind of a serial killer strangle women so i had that in me for the guy
00:45:18.300
convicted murderer samuel little spent his youth in and out of trouble for various offenses but it's
00:45:29.100
believed that on january 31st 1970 little killed his first victim mary brosley this was the start of a
00:45:37.500
35-year killing spree which little claims resulted in 93 murders so why did he start well for one only
00:45:45.900
four years earlier he had been arrested for assaulting a different woman i believe that was the impetus for
00:45:52.780
him to say i will not leave a witness alive again yet little's interviews with investigators in the media
00:46:00.380
revealed another motivation for not only how he ended up choosing his victims but how he killed them
00:46:07.500
one of the things that we believe in the reference sam little was the neck he he was excited by the
00:46:13.100
victim's neck you picked the ones that you think you're going to kill nurse no no if you want
00:46:18.060
it depends on how the neck i've got a smooth neck and turned as a child i got attracted to the neck
00:46:29.020
so you pick them out by the way that their neck looks because if the neck looks good then it might
00:46:33.900
be somebody that you want to have sex with or somebody that you might want to kill what what's what's the
00:46:38.940
no both okay when he put their hands around our throat you wanted them to swallow so he could
00:46:45.180
feel their adam's apple if it was a pretty neck you you were probably going to be a victim if he had
00:46:49.580
an ugly neck maybe maybe not so much but all this stuff is all right so all the fat chicks out there
00:46:55.180
you guys need a the turkey necks y'all are safe from this crazy individual
00:47:01.020
red wasn't don't be important to me this yeah to be skinny and narrow she could be ugly uh-huh she
00:47:08.060
would be fat she could be skinny she ain't gonna be fat because the fat one's nexus right yeah he
00:47:15.340
actually oh my god this guy is fucking wild uh but see even serial killers don't want to deal with
00:47:22.940
these fat bitches god damn oh lord well that he could have murdered before 1970 he used to touch
00:47:33.180
one of his necks while he would be engaged with sex with them you had had that desire before that
00:47:39.980
i had it but it wasn't uh but you never did it all the way no just the choking but never all the way to
00:47:46.700
die okay but it was a fantasy of this and when he did it it was easy and it was something then that
00:47:54.860
he didn't want to stop doing he just went out of control i guess and then after that it was
00:48:02.220
build up crescendo interestingly sam little's last known murder occurred in 2005. that was seven years
00:48:09.340
before his eventual capture so why did he stop little got old and that's why he stopped in 2005.
00:48:17.340
at the age of 65. that's a career he still had the same urges to kill women but physically he was
00:48:26.700
failing he knew that he might get a man literally had a serial killer career he retired in 2004 after 34
00:48:34.860
years of murdering people all over the place god damn 1970 2004. if he continued to try to physically
00:48:43.180
kill a woman and then more importantly tried to get rid of their body sam little's criminal career of
00:48:49.980
sexual assault and murder can be characterized in many ways but how little himself views what he did
00:48:56.540
well that's something he was very particular about he's a man that did not want to admit
00:49:03.580
that he raped anyone in his own mind he wanted to be known as a killer rather than somebody that
00:49:20.220
while we were dancing she says uh you want you want to go riding after this you know this party's
00:49:27.580
over so she had arm in arm walking to the car he's very invested in the idea that he does not hate
00:49:35.020
women he loves women fourth little rock tell me right that's cap right there my man stop the cap uh yeah
00:49:48.140
most people luckily don't have to know about the mechanics of strangulation but
00:49:53.580
it hurts and he did hate women of course the feminists had to slip that in there we duh we know that
00:50:00.540
like stupid and then i would you know went further you know and i choked little was an erotic aggression
00:50:08.940
subtype of rapist and these rapists choose women who are vulnerable they like to control them
00:50:17.100
they act out very aggressively and they act on impulse this subtype is the least common of all
00:50:23.420
subtypes with only about 10 of serial rapists having this erotic aggression he was so attached to
00:50:31.740
this idea that he didn't hurt them and god made him the way he is i gave me this twisted desire where
00:50:38.860
sex and death got all twisted up inside of me like a pretzel that was my weakness
00:50:46.220
i guess i never could get that out of my mind mixed up with sex and he would say well killing
00:50:53.420
somebody is no different than stealing a cookie from a cookie jar because every sin is the same
00:50:58.940
and that's jesus and that's the bible wait what what bro they rationalize any way they can i guess
00:51:06.460
and i said actually i think there's kind of a hierarchy what's the first commandment answer
00:51:12.380
don't wave this book around as a justification for killing women if you never read it he was killing
00:51:19.420
women for sex that was sex for him when we return sitting across from a murderer yeah he was scary to
00:51:28.060
appear like psychologically he's frightening all right fast forward this a little bit
00:51:36.060
and already serving life sentences for multiple murders serial killer samuel little decided to
00:51:41.900
confess to his killings in a series of interviews this helped investigators solve many unanswered questions
00:51:47.900
about numerous cold cases what was truly amazing though was little's ability to recall details of his crimes
00:51:55.420
from decades earlier las vegas described the las vegas victim that was in 93 she was scuffed in
00:52:04.940
dark skin about 40 years old she got there how tall was she she was about five five five three when we
00:52:14.140
were speaking to him he would go from talking to us in the third person to all of a sudden being there and
00:52:21.260
he would have a far off look as if he's right there doing it way over him behind a furniture factory
00:52:28.780
propped right there he was able to say specifically where he dumped her body down a hole
00:52:39.660
steps go down lay down to the basement but he had a real rail around it two way you couldn't fall down
00:52:45.500
down them just you had to go around to the steps so i threw down the steps mr little had a very keen
00:52:53.980
memory it was almost photographic he never took trophies his trophy was up here in his mind he would
00:53:00.620
relive in his jail cell in his holding cell each of these killings over and over again remember some young
00:53:08.460
lady you don't uh yeah you know tires oh it's a tire yes sir yeah you tell us oh oh god yeah
00:53:18.860
what do you remember about the lies in that face during his confessions he is smiling he's reminiscing
00:53:26.860
it's nostalgic for him i think that these were good times for him
00:53:30.940
little also shocked the world by actually drawing sketches of his victims which investigators have
00:53:38.860
been using to solve these cold case murders he remembered some of the names of the victims think
00:53:45.580
about that guys he's able to go back into his memory remember what the girls look like and draw
00:53:52.860
detailed sketches on the women he killed this is from the 70s and 80s this is decades right
00:54:00.940
ago and he's able to recall so that tells you to the mindset that this individual is under
00:54:08.860
he remembered wardrobe he remembered buttons on some of their clothing and zippers this went back
00:54:16.140
all the way to the 1970s it takes a special type of intelligence to have that ability i saw that he
00:54:24.700
drew petechial hemorrhaging in their eyes which is what happens when you strangle women i was looking
00:54:30.540
for evidence i was like what's the detail that he noticed about them that could possibly connect it
00:54:39.100
to a confession connect it eventually hopefully you know to a cold case to a jane doe the people who
00:54:47.260
interviewed sam little found themselves in a unique position they were there to find out more
00:54:52.540
information about these killings yet in the process they became close to a brutal murderer
00:54:59.980
we started writing letters he sent me a christmas letter and he talked about wanting to help me
00:55:05.980
solve any case that he thinks he did if i would send him the information he would do whatever he could
00:55:11.580
our conversations veered from sports boxing my kids my meatloaf do you like to hear what it was like
00:55:21.420
to actually be a human being it made him feel like one for a minute and then he would talk about
00:55:28.860
murdering despite any pleasantries or bonding don't for one second think that interviewers ever forgot
00:55:36.060
who they were speaking to i'll just say that when you see his hands you'll see just how monstrous they are
00:55:42.940
i didn't feel in danger myself because i knew that he didn't mind men if my daughter in that room
00:55:51.660
alone if anyone's daughter was in that room he may still murder that person even though he was 70 years
00:55:59.980
of age he felt he could get away with it he would did you ever shoot any of these girls shoot yeah with
00:56:07.260
the guy on my hand his reaction says it all without that i wouldn't want to do it he was really scary i
00:56:15.660
was always sort of calculating how long it could take to really do damage and how long it would take
00:56:23.260
for a guard to get to me yeah he would definitely strangle your feminist ass i'll tell you that
00:56:27.820
you're probably annoying the out of him psychologically he's fighting up next do we know about all of
00:56:35.420
little's killings or are there more stay with us i think all court shows are the same we're talking
00:56:51.900
you think somebody would have found it eventually yeah i think very very rarely could have found her
00:56:57.900
through serial killer samuel little's confessions law enforcement and prosecutors from different states
00:57:03.180
states were able to solve dozens of cold case investigations and little was finally convicted
00:57:08.540
and sentenced to multiple life terms of imprisonment for several murders at the time of this taping
00:57:14.620
over half of his killings have been confirmed he spoke about 93 different cases so far from my
00:57:21.180
understanding 62 different female bodies have actually been identified as his kills
00:57:28.300
cases and i'm sure that there are more bodies out there there's a continuing investigation still
00:57:35.660
going on with the ones that were never identified and we know some of these weren't listed as homicides
00:57:41.420
they were listed as either overdose deaths or they fell off a ravine sometimes the damage wasn't really
00:57:49.820
available to say that it was a homicide and some of these were mislabeled i wish the hell i didn't
00:57:56.300
but it can't be turned back i mean not only heard a bunch of more that i'm regretting what i'm constantly
00:58:04.540
saying i'm sorry yes sir well for this family they have closure now you know you've confessed to it
00:58:11.660
you've told us what you did how you did it why you did it and i personally thank you for that
00:58:17.020
is it possible though that little told investigators everything or could he be responsible for more
00:58:23.820
killings that we don't know about i believe he's responsible for about the number that he actually
00:58:30.140
said 93. yeah i think he's credible as well i found it to be very credible as far as that he was not
00:58:37.260
boasting he was very matter of fact he wasn't trying to be the worst of the worst my only suspicion
00:58:45.660
is that there might be men tell me about mary ann he sees what's united because transgender there are
00:58:55.420
three transgender women in his victims in the confessions if there are victims he did not
00:59:01.580
confess to i i think there were men while the work continues to verify little's crimes unfortunately
00:59:08.860
for authorities he can no longer help samuel little died in 2020 he was rattled at the end he was
00:59:19.420
definitely going downhill he would say i'm not on my deathbed yet but i've done everything in this life
00:59:25.260
now but die and i was like no you haven't because you're gonna help me and we're gonna find more of these
00:59:34.700
victims sam made me his next of kin his family doesn't want anything to do with him so i got the
00:59:46.060
call i'm still dealing with his possessions his remains with sam being dead it's a loss because i
00:59:53.260
couldn't go back and check details with him sam little may have provided much needed closure to both
00:59:58.860
law enforcement and the victim's loved ones but in the end it never changed who he was or what he did
01:00:07.420
mr little was not sorry about anything that he did he was at one point trying to say that he felt bad
01:00:15.500
for the women that he killed he had nothing to say about the families and the devastation he caused
01:00:22.060
across america he was a parasite and he deserves to be where he is right now in the grave where he sent so
01:00:33.980
many women yeah and he died of natural causes unlike the the women that he killed man so uh definitely
01:00:43.020
got what he deserved there and i honestly got more than he deserved but uh so okay as you guys can see
01:00:48.540
here what i'm also going to show you is this is from the fbi's website guys okay their official
01:00:53.660
websites y'all can see fbi.gov uh confessions of a killer right um fbi seeking assistance of connecting
01:01:00.140
victims of samuel little's confessions okay five years after analysis the fbi's vikap uh program
01:01:06.300
began linking cases to convicted murderer samuel little and nearly 18 months after a text stranger
01:01:10.140
began to listen from listen from him a breathtaking number of confessions the fbi has confirmed
01:01:14.380
little to be the most prolific serial killer in u.s history he has confessed to 93 murders and they
01:01:19.180
believe uh all of his confessions are credible law enforcement been able to verify 50 confessions
01:01:23.980
with many more pending final confirmation so now we're up to about i think 60 according let's see
01:01:30.140
here uh 93 yeah that so involvement at least 60 of them all right so um so pretty much and they're
01:01:40.540
still you know asking for the public's help you know in this so that tells you right there and
01:01:45.340
then that you know this is obviously the real deal um so and they have videos here of people they kill
01:01:50.860
this is a transgender woman he talked about uh marianne killed her in miami florida 1971 1972
01:01:56.700
a couple other videos of unsolved murders that he's done right so they have a confession video along
01:02:01.820
with the sketch that he drew right and this is him throughout the years which they were using in
01:02:06.860
that documentary uh and then here's the murder locations guys which i found crazy y'all can see
01:02:12.780
all over the place la vegas phoenix houston louisiana mississippi georgia tennessee arkansas
01:02:22.380
illinois india uh ohio uh all the way up to um you know different parts of ohio even washington dc
01:02:29.580
it looks like um south carolina and of course all over florida you guys can see here these are all
01:02:37.260
the rest of the sketches here these are unmatched victims here guys so uh you know they're still
01:02:44.460
looking um and you guys can see here all the victims that he was able to draw he remembers
01:02:52.460
so yeah wild wild stuff he's no longer alive anymore but um but yeah he is at the moment the
01:03:01.660
most prolific serial killer in u.s history guys so um yeah wild stuff wild stuff wild stuff hope you
01:03:09.100
guys enjoyed that video don't forget to like comment subscribe and um yeah uh let me know
01:03:15.900
comment below what you guys want me to cover for the next serial killer case um we've covered a bunch
01:03:19.900
of them out at this point um but i'm thinking green river killer might be or toy box killer you guys
01:03:24.780
been requesting those two quite a bit but uh other than that man love y'all hope you guys
01:03:29.340
enjoyed this breakdown i catch you guys next episode of fed it peace
01:03:35.900
i was a special agent with homeland investigations okay guys hsi the cases that i did mostly were
01:03:40.700
human smuggling and drug trafficking no one else has these documents by the way here's what fed it
01:03:47.260
covers doctor lafredo confirmed lacerations due to stepping on glass murder investigations
01:03:55.420
i'm reaching in this jacket you don't know and he's positioning been on february 13 2019 you're facing
01:04:00.540
two counts of two meditative racketeering and rico conspiracies young slime life here and after
01:04:06.380
referred to as ysl the defendants uh 69 and then this is billy seiko right here now when they first