4.8 • 1.8K Ratings
🗓️ 30 April 2025
⏱️ 44 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Is A Serial Killer Hunting Women in New England? Between March 6, 2025, and April 10, 2025, in an area of the United States known as "New England", the remains of 6 women have been found. This information has caused social media to claim a Serial Killer is on the loose and have named him the "New England Serial Killer". Joseph Scott Morgan and Dave Mack take a look at what we know about the cases so far and discuss what a Serial Killer is from a investigative standpoint as opposed to the thoughts and ideas of armchair detectives and social media influencers. Should women in the Northeast be afraid? Is there really a new serial killer on the loose?
Transcribe Highlights
00:02.04 Introduction
01:22.25 Why do some murders get attention?
05:22.15 Remains of 6 women recovered over 8 weeks
10:00.24 What number makes a person a "Serial Killer"?
14:53.23 Weapons used by serial killers
20:15.95 BTK Serial Killer - First Killing was of a family
25:02.88 Who are the missing women whose remains recovered
29:57.23 Could it be an accident?
35:29.97 Mental Illness impact on life of victim
39:47.81 Physical description, similarities
43:17.07 Conclusion
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0:00.0 | Bodybacks with Joseph Scott Moore. |
0:04.0 | I've often thought about this because I see such a broad swath of true crime coverage and information about a variety of different deaths. |
0:18.0 | You know, the country might be focused on, say, for instance, one thing |
0:22.4 | that's going on, like right now at the time of this taping. We've got like the Karen Reed trial going |
0:29.6 | on. We've got a variety of other things involving Coburger and Heurman and all these things |
0:35.8 | that are waiting in the wings. There's a lot of ink being |
0:39.0 | slung about. And I've often thought over the years, do we develop patterns as a consumer, |
0:51.1 | public, as it applies to true crime. |
0:57.0 | And the reason I ask that to myself is that do we get so caught up in cases where, |
1:05.9 | because they're in the public eye, that maybe other things will be forgotten. |
1:14.5 | I'll give you a great example. |
1:16.5 | And I've talked about this case extensively and been on various television shows and stuff. |
1:21.2 | And that's the Pikesin Masker. |
1:24.0 | Back from 16 up in Southern Ohio, you had eight family members killed in that case, and hardly |
1:34.3 | an ounce of ink was spilt over it. But yet you had other things that were singular deaths |
1:41.3 | where the coverage was just intense. |
1:45.0 | You know, things like, I don't know, the Jody Arias case going back to 2013. |
1:49.0 | It all depends on what hits, if you know what I mean. |
1:53.0 | Oh, right now, we're in the middle of the Heurman case, which is Lisk and Gilgo Beach. |
2:00.0 | And it's all the rate. |
2:03.7 | Everybody wants to talk about it, as well as should. |
2:07.0 | But you know, there's another group of deaths that have made their way into the news cycle. |
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