4.2 • 1K Ratings
🗓️ 1 January 2021
⏱️ 24 minutes
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0:00.0 | Jane loved crisps. She ate them for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Even at FancyPants restaurants, |
0:07.6 | Your crisps, madam. Years went by, but then crisps stopped doing it for her. They got her thrown out of cinemas and were forever in the bedsheets. |
0:18.0 | Crisps. They're kind of like your current account. Just because they were good ones doesn't mean you have to stick with them forever. |
0:26.4 | Maybe it's time to switch with the current account switch service. Welcome to Murder Minute. |
0:35.0 | On today's episode, Nicola Dixon, but first your true crime headlines. Your True Crime Headlines |
0:52.0 | Samuel Little, the man authorities say was the most prolific serial killer in US history with nearly 60 confirmed victims, died Wednesday in California at age 80. |
0:59.0 | Samuel Little had diabetes, heart trouble, and other ailments and died at a California hospital while serving a life sentence for multiple counts of murder. |
1:10.0 | After denying for years that he was a killer, in 2018 Little opened up to a Texas ranger, James Holland, who had been asked to question him about a killing that it turned out Little did not commit. But over the course of |
1:25.1 | approximately 700 hours of interviews, little provided details of murders |
1:30.0 | across the country that only the killer would know. |
1:35.0 | Little confessed to killing 93 people between 1970 and 2005. |
1:41.0 | He even provided Holland with drawings of his victims and provided details, such as the year and the location of the murder and where he had dumped the bodies. |
1:53.0 | Most of the slangs took place in Florida and Southern California. |
1:58.0 | Little said that he started killing in Miami on New Year's Eve in 1970. |
2:04.0 | He told Holland, quote, |
2:06.0 | It was like drugs. I came to like it. |
2:10.0 | He said that his last killing was in Tupelo, Mississippi in 2005. |
2:16.4 | He also killed people in Tennessee, Texas, Ohio, Nevada, Arkansas, and other states. |
2:24.6 | But it was Kentucky authorities who finally caught up with him |
2:28.0 | in 2012 after he was arrested on drug charges, |
2:32.2 | and his DNA linked him to three California killings. |
2:37.0 | Later he started confessing to other murders. |
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