Update October 9, 2019: Our Cold Case Unit continues to work to identify the young woman who serial killer, Samuel Little, confessed to murdering in Prince George’s County back in 1972. Within the last week, detectives sent the victim’s femur to a laboratory in Virginia for extensive DNA testing. As we await those test results, we again ask our community to call us if they have any information that could help detectives determine this young woman’s identity.
Earlier this week, convicted serial killer, Samuel Little,
sketched this drawing of a young woman he confessed to killing in Prince
George’s County in 1972. The department’s Cold Case Unit hopes this image will
finally lead detectives to uncovering the victim’s name. She is one of
approximately 90 women who Samuel Little has admitted to murdering in the
country starting back in the 1970s.
In October of 2018, a Texas
Ranger contacted law enforcement in Washington DC with information that
Little confessed to murdering someone in the DC region
in the early 1970s. That information prompted Prince George’s County Police
Cold Case Unit detectives to travel to Texas in November where they interviewed
Little.
The now
78 year old is serving multiple life sentences there for murders in California
and Texas. During the interview, Little told our investigators specific and
previously unreported details about an unsolved murder in Laurel that likely
took place in the summer of 1972. In December of that year, a hunter found the
skeletal remains of the victim in a then wooded area off of Route 197 and the
Baltimore-Washington Parkway.
After
the murder, a medical examiner determined the victim is a Caucasian female,
approximately 5’2”–5’6”, with dirty blonde or reddish hair. She was
approximately 19 years old at the time of her death. Efforts to identify her at
the time of the discovery were unsuccessful.
According
to Little, he picked up the victim at a bus station on New York Avenue in the
District of Columbia. Little says the victim indicated she was recently
divorced and from the Massachusetts area. She
may also have been a mother. Cold Case Unit
detectives are now working with multiple agencies, including the FBI, Massachusetts State Police and the Metropolitan
Police Department to try to determine her
identity.
Anyone
with information that could help investigators is urged
to please call 301-772-4925. Callers wishing to
remain anonymous may call Crime Solvers at 1-866-411-TIPS (8477), or go online at www.pgcrimesolvers.com, or use the “P3 Tips” mobile app (search “P3 Tips” in
the Apple Store or Google Play to download the app onto your mobile device.)
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