Search results
The Alphabet murders (also known as the Double Initial murders) are an unsolved series of child murders which occurred between 1971 and 1973 in Rochester, New York. All three victims were girls aged ten or eleven whose surname began with the same letter as that of her first name.
People also ask
Is the Alphabet Killer based on a true story?
What happened in the Alphabet Murders?
Where did 'the alphabet murders' come from?
Did a suspect in the alphabet murders get released from prison?
Nov 27, 2022 · In the early 1970s, the Alphabet Murderer stalked Rochester, New York, killing girls who had the same first and last initial – and these horrific crimes remain unsolved to this day. On the afternoon of November 16, 1971, a young girl ran down the side of a highway in upstate New York.
Nov 18, 2023 · Tubman, a retired police officer who now works as a private detective, believes that a Rochester man jailed for over 30 years is the most likely killer of Walkowicz and Maenza.
Oct 18, 2023 · The puzzling case of The Alphabet Murders has stumped investigators for more than 50 years. In the early 1970s, three young women were murdered in Rochester, New York but within years, their cases went cold. While several individuals have been eyed as suspects, no one has been arrested and convicted with any of the murders.
- From 1971 to 1973, Carmen Colón, Wanda Walkowicz, and Michelle Maenza were each separately abducted, strangled, sexually assaulted, and dumped in b...
- Carmen Colon was a 10-year-old Puerto Rican girl who spoke little English and lived with her grandparents in Rochester. She often ran errands in th...
- Wanda Walkowicz was 11 years old at the time of her death. Rita DeCann told the Democrat & Chronicle that her older sister was a tomboy with red ha...
- Months after Wanda went missing, on Nov. 28 1973, 11-year-old Michelle went to her school nurse's office in tears on the Monday after Thanksgiving....
Nov 23, 2013 · A California man convicted of the murders decades ago of four women whose names and surnames bore matching initials has been sentenced to death. Joseph Naso, 79, was found guilty last month in...
The killer seemed to have a macabre signature – the victims, all from different parts of the city, were dumped in or near towns that also matched their initials. This chilling pattern fired up the press and led to the coining of the term “Alphabet Murders”.
SERIAL KILLER: The Alphabet Murders (Part 1) Episode Summary. Dozens of commuters see a young girl fleeing a car on the side of the expressway in Rochester, NY, but no one pulls over to help. The community is devastated when her body is discovered just days later, but it’s assumed to be a tragic but isolated incident.