Suspected Serial Killer Samuel Little Suspected in More Than 90 Murders
November 15, 2018 Updated: November 15, 2018
Samuel Little, a convicted serial killer, may be connected to more than 90 murders across the United States. If the claim is true and he’s convicted of the charges, he would be the worst serial killer in U.S. history.
Little, also known as Samuel McDowell, is serving three life sentences for killing three women in the Los Angeles area in the late 1980s. Texas authorities on Nov. 13 told NBC News that the 78-year-old may be connected to dozens of murders in a dozen states over a three-decade span.
Currently housed in a facility in Wise County, Little provided investigators details of a “multitude” of killings that might have committed between 1970 and 2005 in Texas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Louisiana, Illinois, Ohio, California, Indiana, Arizona, New Mexico, and South Carolina, the network reported.
He was convicted in 2014 for the slayings of three Los Angeles women, a Fox affiliate reported. In the past three years, investigators from all over the U.S. have been sent to Wise County to speak with Little about their cases.
In July, Little was charged in the 1994 killing of Denise Christie Brothers in Ector County, Texas, before he was extradited to California. An investigator “was able to use this case as a catalyst to continue to gain trust and information from Little in order to solve dozens of other cases,” Ector County District Attorney Bobby Bland told NBC.
Bland added that if he’s found guilty of the murders, he “will be confirmed as one of, if not the most, prolific serial killers in U.S. history,” NBC reported.
“Little has provided details of more than 90 murders committed in multiple states,” the sheriff’s office stated, Newsweek reported.
Gary Ridgway, the so-called “Green River Killer” who terrorized Washington state and Oregon, was convicted of killing 49 people between 1982 and 2000. He claimed to have killed 71 people, but he was suspected in 90 murders. John Wayne Gacy was convicted of killing around 33 people in the Chicago area, while Ted Bundy confessed to killing 30 or more people in the 1970s. Both Bundy and Gacy were sentenced to death and were later executed, while Ridgway, 69, is serving life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Bland noted that none of Little’s confessions have been disproven.
“When you lose someone like this, you don’t know what happened to them or why it happened, it’s important to get the answers,” Bland said, CBS7 reported. “And now there are people across the country that are getting those answers.”
“There are people all over this country that haven’t had answers, haven’t had justice, but now they will,” he elaborated, ABC13 reported. “So even though it was delayed, it will not be denied.” ABC13 reported that 30 of the murders have been confirmed by authorities.
Watch: Texas high-speed chase suspect crashes, runs with baby in hand
Black on white bias and
hostility plus violence equals terror. We see it every day, no matter how often
Don Lemon tries to deny it: Black violence is the terror that dare not speak
its name.
HEATHER
MAC DONALD
WINDOW INTO THE DEPRAVED GHETTO BLACK CULTURE of VIOLENCE, HATE AND RACISM
WINDOW INTO THE DEPRAVED GHETTO BLACK CULTURE of VIOLENCE, HATE AND RACISM
Black Violence: The Terror
That Dare Not Speak Its Name
Even stranger than Don Lemon’s fairy
tale that white people are responsible for violent terrorism in this country,
is the fact that no national conservative media figures refuted him.
A shame, because it is so easily done.
And so important to do.
Lemon concocted his claim in front of
CNN’s Cuomo the Lesser, who stared dumbstruck as his colleague sketched his
vision of white supremacists running amok with terror and violence in their
wake.
Cuomo has made a career of shutting
up and nodding his head when black people like D. L. Hughley come on his show
and insist that white violence against black people is wildly out of
proportion. A lie.
The following day, Lemon challenged his
angry critics to check the numbers: White terror is eight times greater than
other racial terror.
In response, all that we heard from
conservative media was fake outrage. Calls for his firing. Demands for a
retraction. But not much in the way of using facts to show that Lemon was
wrong. Dangerously wrong.
Not that many people expected much else
from most conservative pundits. These are the same people who cower in front of
“It’s okay to be white” signs.
Well, it’s not okay to be white. That is
Lemon’s stock in trade. And he and others ply it so well that most cannot see
or even declare the obvious: That over the last five years, black mob violence
in America has been -- by far -- the greatest source of domestic terror.
Shall we review a few: How about before,
during and after the trial of George Zimmerman for the killing of St. Trayvon
of Sanford. You remember him: He’s the guy who could have been President
Obama’s son.
Instead, he became a petty burglar, a
small time violent crook, whose death inspired large-scale black violence in
Los Angeles, Oakland, Baltimore, Grand Rapids, Toledo, Gainesville,
Mobile, Chicago, and on and on and on. All aided and abetted by Lemon et al at
CNN.
I documented a few episodes in this
article at the time: Just
click here.
But Trayvon was just a warm-up for the
real display of black terror in America. That happened in the summer of 2014 in
a suburb of St. Louis called Ferguson. There, a cop shot a 6’5 “well-muscled”
black man named Michael Brown, after Brown tried to take the cop’s gun, then
refused to stand down as he prepared to charge the officer.
After days and days of looting, gunfire,
molotov cocktails, property destruction, attacks on police, and yes, death, the
Michael Brown riots continued on a low burn around the rest of the country.
It became the beginning of a mantra,
Trayvon, Michael Brown. No justice. No peace. No racist police.
It even sparked the growth of a national
movement: Black Lives Matter. You remember them: “What do we want? Dead cops.
When do we want them? Now.”
In Baltimore, soon after, a drug dealer
named Freddie Grey died in police custody. Yes, there were riots. Yes, the black
people of Baltimore burned and looted in an ecstatic frenzy for days.
Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake held a
news conference where she bragged she was giving the rioters “space to
destroy.” The next day, she denied saying it, even after being confronted
saying it on video.
Over 100 police were injured in those
riots. Many after city officials “abandoned” them by refusing to send support
when they were under attack from the black people.
This is all on video. Easy to find.
These riots are like dominoes: If you
remember one, chances you, you remember the rest. In Milwaukee, a black cop
shot a black man. Riots. Burning. Destruction. You know the drill: Everyone was
having a good time by the light of a burning gas station.
In Charlotte, black people terrorized
the town after cops shot another black criminal in the commission of yet
another crime. They did not like that.
Around the country, every day, police
are subject to slurs, taunts, threats, violence, and even murder from black
people who just are not that into white people.
These examples might not meet the
standards of Don Lemon’s phony terror test. But the victims have not forgotten
the enormous terror in this country. And how it continues today in different
forms.
On Halloween, hundreds of black people
rampaged through Hyde Park in Chicago -- home to Barack Obama, Bill Ayers, and
Louis Farrakhan -- destroying property, defying police, setting fires.
Watch any of the videos, then try to
tell the neighbors they are not being terrorized. But no one was arrested, so
it never happened. Except on video.
In South Jersey, two white kids were
hospitalized with serious head injuries they received after they refused
to give their trick or treat candy to the 10-20 black people who demanded it.
Think that’s not an act of terror just
because the black people did not leave a thank you note? Or a sign that said
‘Vote for Maxine?’ Or a demand for more free stuff? Guess again.
In Dallas, five cops were killed during
a Black Lives Matter parade. Afterward, black people looted a 7-11 then stuck
around under the gaze of local police, dancing -- yes, dancing -- with joy,
celebrating the carnage. At their funeral, President Obama figured it all out:
the shooting of the five police was all about white racism.
“You know it,” he urged the crowd to
acknowledge.
This is a very long list of black
violence and denial, deceit and delusion from reporters and public officials.
Lots more where this came from in my
books, the latest being Don’t
Make the Black Kids Angry, and videos over at minds.com/ColinFlaherty.
From the big cities to small
suburban enclaves, black terrorism is real. And when stunned residents plead
with city officials for help, all they get are weak admonitions about keeping their
head on a swivel and don’t forget -- calling the cops on black criminals
is a very bad thing to do.
Reporters like Lemon insist that absent
a handwritten confession, or a sign, or a recorded audio and video, black mob
violence in America must be considered “random” and not an act of terror.
But we have something better than notes
and idiots spouting hateful slogans: We have patterns. And how they are proof
of bias. Just ask former district attorney and current U.S. senator from the
great state of Rhode Island, Sheldon Whitehouse.
“When is pattern evidence of bias?”
asked the liberal Senator Whitehouse at a recent hearing. “In court, pattern is
evidence of bias all the time. Evidence on which juries and trial judges rely
to show discriminatory intent. To show a common scheme. To show bias.”
Black on white bias and hostility plus
violence equals terror. We see it every day, no matter how often Don Lemon
tries to deny it: Black violence is the terror that dare not speak its name.
Colin Flaherty documents the
denial, deceit and delusion of Den Lemon and others in books, articles
and videos. Which you should read if you want to know what is really
going on.
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