WICHITA, KAN - After 25 years of silence, police have apparently heard again from the BTK Strangler, a serial killer who terrorized the city during the 1970s. A letter sent last week to The Wichita ...
While the Netflix series lets these killers expound on their heinous acts, Mindhunter doesn’t always go into detail about each of the crimes. For those wanting to delve deeper, ET has put together a ...
WICHITA, Kan. -- More than two decades have passed since a serial killer terrorized Wichita, strangling or stabbing seven victims and bragging about it to the media. Police hadn't heard a peep from ...
WICHITA, Kan. It took detectives 31 years to catch the man they believe is the BTK strangler, even though the killer scattered clues around and the suspect under arrest was not exactly hiding. But ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. Dennis Rader, the BTK serial killer whose ...
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) -- Investigators said Thursday that letters sent to police and a television station appear to be the latest communications from a serial killer who resurfaced this year after more ...
WICHITA, Kan. — Days before his trial is scheduled to begin, the man suspected of being the BTK strangler called a TV station from jail and complained that his lawyers have not been giving him recent ...
WICHITA, Kan. – A man suspected in a string of 10 slayings that terrorized Wichita residents for more than three decades was being held yesterday on $10 million bond and could appear in court as early ...
WICHITA, Kan. The man accused of terrorizing Wichita for years, the alleged BTK serial killer, has a preliminary trial this week that may provide the public with a fuller glimpse at the state's case ...
WICHITA, Kan. -- The man suspected in a string of 10 slayings attributed to the BTK serial killer confessed to at least six of those killings, a source with direct knowledge of the investigation said ...
BTK suspect Dennis Rader pleaded guilty Monday to 10 counts of first-degree murder, admitting in a chillingly matter-of-fact voice to a series of slayings that terrorized Wichita, Kan., beginning in ...