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Strangler - The Boston

: Many officials and families of the victims doubted his confession due to its inconsistencies and a lack of physical evidence at the time.

, a factory worker and military veteran, became the primary suspect after confessing to 11 of the Strangler murders while in prison for unrelated rapes. The Boston Strangler

: DeSalvo later recanted his confession before being stabbed to death in prison in 1973. : Many officials and families of the victims

The refers to the perpetrator(s) of a series of murders in the Boston area between June 14, 1962, and January 4, 1964. The case remains one of the most notorious in American history due to its impact on the public psyche and the lingering questions surrounding the guilt of the man who confessed. The Victims and the Crimes The refers to the perpetrator(s) of a series

: Most victims were sexually assaulted and strangled with articles of their own clothing, such as silk stockings or nylons, often tied in distinctive bows.

: The killer typically entered homes without force, suggesting the victims either knew him or believed he was a service provider.

: In July 2013, modern forensic testing linked DeSalvo's DNA to the 1964 murder of Mary Sullivan , the last known victim. While this definitively tied him to one crime, it did not prove he was responsible for all of them, leaving the "multiple killers" theory alive for some.