This is a story I never heard of before and it is really interesting, it took place in Washington,DC in 1971 where Carol Spinks goes missing. Her mom told the children not to leave the house and the oldest daughter asked the younger girl to go to the store. Carol heads out for a walk and her mom sees her, she sees her and told her to go head come right back home. The police were called and the police told the mom that she ran away. They found the body of Carol she was strangled and her face, neck, and hands had bruises. A lot of protests were going on about the Vietnam war, the police were doing that and not looking for a killer the victims were black and more women went messing listen to the story below very interesting. Black women and girls were gone missing in Washington DC and in the ’70s and life of black women have not been important for years. Black women are still going missing.All video gives you a great picture of what was going on.
Police in Washington, DC, have attributed an unsolved murder from 1972 to convicted serial killer Samuel Little, just weeks after he admitted to committing at least 90 killings since the early 1970s.
Prince George’s County Police said Wednesday that officials received a call in October about an unsolved murder dating back to the summer of 1972, in which a hunter discovered human remains in a wooded area off Route 197, along the Baltimore-Washington Parkway in Laurel.
Officials said a Texas Ranger informed them that Little had confessed to a murder in the Washington region that matched their case.
Detectives set out to interview Little in Texas, where he is serving multiple life sentences for murders in that state and California. According to investigators, he revealed “specific and previously unreported details” about the case that led them to believe his confession.
Police have never been able to identify the victim, but say Little’s confession has helped them to narrow their search.
The medical examiner’s report described the victim as a 19-year-old Caucasian female, with dirty blond or reddish hair. The victim was between 5 feet 2 and 5 feet 6.
Little told investigators he picked the woman up at a bus station on New York Avenue in the District of Columbia and learned that she was recently divorced and had come there from Massachusetts.
Nearly two weeks ago, Little confessed to 90 unsolved homicides between 1970 and 2005.
Along with crimes in Texas and California, Little may also have killed people in Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Louisiana, Illinois, Ohio, California, Indiana, Arizona, New Mexico, and South Carolina, authorities said.
He was previously sentenced in 2014 for the killings of three women — Carol Alford, 41, Audrey Nelson, 35, and Apodaca, 46 — in Los Angeles in the 1980s. DNA linked him to the murders in 2012.
Officials are calling Little one of the most prolific serial killers in US history.
https://youtu.be/ZNxOOGbNkCE?t=7