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The DNA of serial killer Bobby Fowler, who died in 2006 while in prison, was discovered on the body of Colleen MacMillen, who went missing in 1974. Given that the murders span almost a 50year period, it is believed that there have been multiple killers along the Highway of Tears, with only one suspect ever being implicated definitively in some way. Perhaps the most infamous of these is the Highway of Tears in British Columbia, a 450-mile (720 kilometer) stretch of Highway 16 between Prince George and Prince Rupert that has seen at least 18 (and possibly as many as 40) predominantly Indigenous women murdered between 19. While the United States is generally thought of as the serial killer capital of the world, Canada has had its fair share of heinous murders, including more than a few that remain unsolved. Despite a few promising leads, including the discovery of a Blue AMC Gremlin suspected of having been the killer's car, the case remains open.

The truly disturbing part of the whole case was that each of the children -Mark Stebbins, 12, Jill Robinson, 12, Kristine Mihelich, 10, and Timothy King, 11 - were discovered fully-clothed and washed, and were held anywhere from 4 to 19 days before being killed.

Due to children being the only targets, the investigation set off a wave of mass hysteria in the state of Michigan at the time, with parents understandably obsessed with educating their children on "stranger danger" and instituting many neighborhood watch initiatives. The killer received their nickname because each child was bathed before their murder, suggesting the killer had some form of twisted parental instinct. The Oakland County Child Killer, better known as "The Babysitter," is an unidentified serial killer who murdered at least four children in Oakland County, Michigan, between 19. While there are numerous serial killers who have successfully evaded capture, the stories behind the following murderers are perhaps the greatest examples of the ones who got away. We crave answers to our questions, but unfortunately, we'll probably never know the true identities of most of these murderers.

There's something uniquely frightening about the thought that many of these killers are probably still out there somewhere, walking among us. While it's chilling to read about the atrocious acts that serial killers such as John Wayne Gacy or Ted Bundy committed, it's just as fascinating to speculate about the ones who have never been caught. Ferrara/Newsday RM via Getty ImagesĪmerican culture has a particular fascination with serial killers, to the point where they have been elevated to the level of myth: terrifying monsters that keep us up at night but ones we seemingly can't stop learning about. The Long Island killer is still at large. Pictured is a makeshift memorial for a victim of the Gilgo Beach murders in Long Island, New York.
