Serial Killer Baton Rouge 2010
BATON ROUGE- A suspected serial killer convicted of the rape and murder of one woman was set to go before the state parole board Thursday, but withdrew a request for. More Serial Killer Baton Rouge 2010 videos. Game Guitar Flash Untuk Pc. BATON ROUGE - Serial killer Derrick Todd Lee was sentenced to a life sentence and death for the murder of two women. DNA evidence was also used to link Lee to five.
Over the past two decades, the citizens of Baton Rouge and its outskirts have been hunted by no less than five serial killers. Close to 70 men and women have been taken since around 1997, when authorities started noticing unusual patterns forming in their murder statistics. The phenomenon is now receiving national attention in America, at least among devotees of Discovery’s new crime documentary, which tracks the reinvestigation of the 20-year-old unsolved murder of Eugenie Boisfontaine in the parish of Iberville, just outside Baton Rouge. The series, shot in real time and dubbed the love child of Serial and True Detective, follows the original lead investigator, retired detective Rodie Sanchez and cold case Detective Aubrey St Angelo, as they team up to find Ms Boisfontaine’s killer. One of the revelations to emerge from the series is that the investigation — both then and now — has been “complicated” by the fact that “multiple serial killers” were operating in the area at the time of the 34-year-old graduate student’s 1997 murder.
Last weekend, one of the prime suspects, Derrick Todd Lee, whose DNA has been linked to the murders of seven women — including two who lived on the same street as Ms Boisfontaine — died in hospital while on Death Row. In fact Lee is one of at least five serial killers who have operated in the area independently of each other since 1995. The others include Sean Vincent Gillis, Jefferey Guillory and Ronald Dominique (who preyed exclusively in gay men). The fifth, named “Jennings killer” after the district (just south of Baton Rouge) his victims come from, has been linked to the murders of at least eight women and remains unidentified and at large. Ms Mustafa co-wrote the recent New York Times bestseller with Gary L Stewart and, about the Derrick Lee Todd case, with Sue Israel and Special Prosecutor Tony Clayton. “It’s crazy,” Ms Mustafa told news.com.au.