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Dennis Rader, the BTK serial killer whose self-given nickname stands for “Bind, Torture, Kill,” played a cat and mouse game with investigators and reporters for decades before he was caught.
Dennis Lynn Rader (born March 9, 1945), also known as BTK (an abbreviation he gave himself for "bind, torture, kill"), is an American serial killer who murdered at least 10 people in Wichita and Park City, Kansas, between 1974 and 1991. Although he occasionally killed or attempted to kill men and children, Rader typically targeted women.
BTK killer’s daughter wears prison-like orange at CrimeCon for ‘special convict in her life’ - live updates Rachel Sharp,Andrea Blanco and Andrea Cavallier September 25, 2023 at 4:36 AM
Now a victim advocate and 45-year-old mother, she tells Sheila Flynn that she’s ‘heartbroken’ as another family comes to terms with a loved one’s arrest in the Long Island serial killer case
The first of the 10 "BTK Murders" took place in the U.S. city of Wichita, Kansas, as a security alarm installer, Dennis Rader, strangled a family of four people, two of them children. [231] Rader would kill three more victims in the 1970s, then resume the murders in 1985, and would taunt the Wichita police before finally being arrested in 2005 ...
Deangelo Martin was born on May 30, 1985, in Detroit, Michigan. During his childhood, he lived in a rough area and became involved with criminal activity. His mother, Chantrienes Barker, was sentenced to life in prison for the kidnapping and murder of Antoine Caruthers in 1998. [3] After his mother's arrest, Martin was raised by his father. [4]
Similar to suspect Bryan Kohberger’s family, my family and our lives were completely upended with the 2005 arrest of my father, Dennis Rader Voices: My father is the BTK serial killer.
The Algiers Motel at 8301 Woodward Avenue [7] near the Virginia Park district was a black-owned business, owned by Sam Gant and McUrant Pye. It was one of three motels in Detroit owned by Gant and Pye, the others being the Alamo, at Alfred and Woodward, and the Rio Grande, on West Grand near Grand River. [8]