Samuel Little is now considered the most prolific serial killer in the United States, having killed at least 93 people that authorities know of.
The Green River Killer - Gary Ridgway (Part 1)
Gary Ridgway was convicted of 49 murders but later confessed to 65 — and by the end of 1983 alone, he had already killed at least 12 women while investigators counted only 9.
Morbid
The Green River Killer - Gary Ridgway (Part 1)
Gary Ridgway was convicted of 49 murders but later confessed to 65 — and by the end of 1983 alone, he had already killed at least 12 women while investigators counted only 9.
TL;DR
True crime podcast Morbid dives into Part 1 of the Green River Killer case, chronicling Gary Ridgway's earliest known victims in the summer and fall of 1982 around the Tacoma/SeaTac area. Hosts Alaina Urquhart and Ash Kelley trace the discovery of at least 12 victims — most of them teenagers or young women — while exposing systemic failures in law enforcement's treatment of sex workers and missing persons [1] — Alaina Urquhart "There were 600 teenagers living on the streets of King County alone. Police operated under a blanket assumption that missing adults — espec…" 29:38 . The single most chilling takeaway: by the end of 1983, Ridgway was later known to have claimed at least 12 victims, though investigators at the time counted only 9 [2] — Alaina Urquhart "Actual victim count vs. known: 12 vs 9: By the time investigators counted 9 Green River victims, Ridgway had actually already killed 12 wom…" 55:00 .
Part 1 of a 4-part series on Gary Ridgway, the Green River Killer. Beginning in 1982 in the Tacoma/Seattle area, Alaina Urquhart traces the discovery of the earliest known victims dumped in and around the Green River, the formation of a 25-person task force, and the systemic law enforcement failures that allowed Ridgway to keep killing.
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The episode opens with three pre-roll sponsor segments. State Farm promotes their personalized home, auto, boat, and RV coverage through a local agent or statefarm.com. Sugar Bee Apples pitches their uniquely sweet apple variety with a free recipe book at hellosugarbee.com. IXL offers an educational online learning platform for pre-K through 12th grade and promotes an exclusive 20% off membership for listeners at ixl.com/20.
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Alaina announces upfront that this is a four-part series because Gary Ridgway's case is so vast. She explains that Ridgway was long considered the most prolific serial killer in American history but has since been surpassed by Samuel Little, who killed at least 93 known victims. The hosts issue a frank content warning: the episode contains graphic descriptions, rape, and victims as young as 15 and 16 years old. Ash and Alaina agree to skip any lighthearted intro business and dive directly into the case, setting a sober, respectful tone from the start.
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Wendy Coffield's story is one of quiet desperation: after her parents divorced, she moved with her mother from a farm to subsidized housing and began drifting. After two theft arrests — including stealing food stamps to help her mother — she was placed in a foster home. On July 8th she left to visit her grandmother and never arrived. A week later, two boys on bikes spotted her nude body tangled in branches along the Green River, her pants tied tightly around her neck. The only meaningful physical evidence was an unusual industrial spray paint on those pants, which led nowhere. Detectives knew she had been sexually assaulted, but a week in the water had washed away nearly all forensic evidence. Wendy's case went cold almost immediately — just one more tragic story in a region already too familiar with young women disappearing.
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On August 12, 1982, P.D.J. Meat Company employee Frank Leonard stepped outside for a cigar break and noticed the water churning strangely below the old slaughterhouse — then realized he was looking at a woman's body. By the time officers arrived, nearly the entire factory crew had gathered at the scene. King County Detective David Reichert, already a hardened veteran who had survived being stabbed in the neck multiple times while rescuing a trapped woman, arrived and found 21-year-old Deborah Lynn Bonner face down in the current, her hands raised as if waving or reaching for help. The last known sighting of Deborah was July 25th, when she left the Three Bears Motel to 'catch some dates.' The Bonner family pointed detectives toward her boyfriend Martin as a possible suspect. Barely had Reichert begun to pursue that lead when the next report came in.
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Three days after finding Deborah Bonner, a rubber raft treasure hunter on the Green River came upon two nude women half-submerged along the bank. He spotted a young man on the shore who waved politely, then walked to a pickup truck and drove away. When Reichert arrived and walked the banks himself — crawling through tall weeds on his hands and knees — he came face to face with a third body: a teenage girl, partially dressed, her pants tied around her neck in the same fashion as Wendy Coffield's. The three victims were identified as 31-year-old Marcia Chapman, 17-year-old Cynthia Hines, and 16-year-old Opal Mills. At a press conference the following day, officials confirmed to the public that one suspect was likely responsible for all five deaths, making it official: there was a serial killer on the loose in the Tacoma area.
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Alaina takes time to tell each victim's story with care. Marcia Chapman was a mother of three young children living on the SeaTac Strip who left her apartment telling her children she'd be back soon. Cynthia Hines, 17, had a self-described 'protector' who was really a pimp and who watched her get into a black Jeep without writing down the plate. Then came Opal Mills — a 16-year-old who spent her time in church and with her family, a curious outlier with no sex work history whatsoever. The press, however, made no such distinction, and a school official told a reporter that 'Opal's pimp picked her up from school the day she went missing.' That pimp? Her brother, who was simply making sure she got home safely. The episode also reveals the grotesque detail from Marcia Chapman's autopsy: the killer had placed small stones inside her so tightly they required surgical removal.
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The formation of a 25-person task force — King County's largest investigation since the Bundy slayings — should have represented a turning point. But investigators were so consumed by their five known victims and the tip hotline that they never checked open missing persons cases, which might have revealed the killer's weekly pace. Giselle LaVorne's story is perhaps the most damning example: she disappeared July 17th, exactly between Wendy Coffield and Deborah Bonner. Her partner James Tyndall filed a report, offered investigators a list of her regular clients, and begged them to take it seriously. Officers told him she'd turn up. She did — nude, with men's socks tied around her neck, found in underbrush near the airport months later. The episode also explores the systemic failure of the era: 600 teenagers lived on the streets of King County, and police operated on the assumption that missing adults, especially sex workers, had simply chosen to vanish.
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Ash kicks off the break by mentioning how much she missed her dog Dolores while traveling. The Ollie ad promotes fresh human-grade dog food with 70% off a welcome kit using code MORBID at ollie.com/morbid. BetterHelp promotes their online therapy platform with 10% off at betterhelp.com/morbid. State Farm closes the break with a reminder about their Personal Price Plan for customizable coverage.
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Sixteen-year-old Linda Rule had dropped out of school and was sharing a motel room with her 24-year-old boyfriend Bobby. On September 26th, she told Bobby she was going to Kmart before trying to make some money, and never came back. Bobby kept meticulous notes of his search and turned them over to police, but Linda effectively vanished. Her skeletal remains were found in January 1983 near the Northgate Hospital construction site, identified through dental records. Because she wasn't found near the river and no cause of death could be confirmed, Seattle Police initially didn't classify her as a Green River victim. Meanwhile, the task force, run primarily by David Reichert and former sex crimes detective Faye Brooks, continued fielding calls from parents with missing children as the Green River Killer appeared to go quiet through the winter.
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In the fall of 1982, the Green River Task Force enlisted the FBI's Behavioral Analysis Unit — the group immortalized in the show Mindhunter, which Alaina briefly laments was cancelled. The resulting profile pointed to a man familiar with the area who had contact with sex workers. That description fit Melvin Foster, an unemployed cab driver who had inserted himself into the investigation by offering to be an informant. He failed a polygraph and became the primary suspect. But critical details didn't add up: a March 1982 knee injury would have made carrying bodies physically impossible, and his car was broken down around the time the victims were being transported to dump sites. Within months, Foster was ruled out entirely, and the task force was right back where they started — seven victims, no suspects.
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Carol Ann Christensen was 22 years old, a mother of five, and had just secured her first waitressing job after months of unemployment. On May 3rd, 1983, she disappeared while walking to work. Her body was found five days later in Maple Valley, about 20 miles from the strip — a disturbing departure from every previous Green River crime scene. The body had been posed: hands folded across her chest with ground sausage placed on them, two gutted trout laid across her throat, an empty wine bottle across her stomach, and a paper bag over her head. Her bra was on inside out and her shoes were unlaced. Investigators debated whether this was a different killer entirely, but the washerwoman wrinkles on her skin suggested recent immersion in water — a Green River signature. A paper bag was traced to a grocery store near the killer's known hunting grounds. Investigators concluded the elaborate staging was likely Ridgway's attempt to throw off detectives, and it nearly worked.
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Shonda Summers left her family in San Diego to live with her father in Seattle, but after being arrested on a prostitution charge and her father refusing to post bail, she took off with her boyfriend. In October 1982, she vanished — and it took nearly a month for anyone to even file a missing persons report, with no one able to clearly recall the last time they'd seen her. Her badly decomposed body was found in August 1983 by an apple-picking couple near the strip, close to where Giselle LaVorne had been discovered the year before. Advanced decomposition made it impossible to determine cause of death. The task force added her to the list as victim number 9. But Alaina drops the chilling corrective: Shonda was actually victim number 12 — the true order of Ridgway's crimes wouldn't be untangled for years.
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Alaina caps Part 1 by noting that by the end of 1983, the Green River Killer was far from done — and lays out his ultimate known tally: convicted of 49 murders, he later confessed to 65. The hosts share a moment of disbelief that such an 'unremarkable little rat' could operate for so long, from the early 1980s into the 1990s. Ash observes that the idea of his face being the last you'd ever see is uniquely horrifying. To offer listeners a palate cleanser before signing off, Ash shares a fun fact: the average person in Sweden eats about 22 pounds of chocolate per year, prompting a brief, warm tangent about Swedish gummy candy and a recommendation to seek out Sweetish Candy.
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The episode ends with a Capella University spot targeting lifelong learners and degree-seekers ('What can't you do? Visit capella.edu'), followed by a quick plug from Angie co-founder Angie Hicks, promoting Angie as the platform to find trusted local contractors for home projects. With that, the episode formally closes out.
- Behavioral Analysis Unit (BAU)
- The FBI division that develops criminal profiles of unknown offenders based on crime scene evidence and behavioral patterns; consulted by the Green River Task Force in 1982.
- Criminal profile
- A law enforcement tool that uses crime scene evidence and psychological analysis to infer likely characteristics of an unknown perpetrator, such as age, occupation, and background.
- SeaTac Strip
- The stretch of Pacific Highway South near Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, known in the 1980s as a high-traffic area for street-based sex work and a primary hunting ground for Gary Ridgway.
- Major Crimes Unit
- A specialized detective division within a police department responsible for investigating serious crimes like homicide; David Reichert worked in the King County Major Crimes Unit.
- Polygraph
- A lie-detector machine that measures physiological responses like heart rate and breathing; suspect Melvin Foster failed a polygraph, briefly making him the task force's primary suspect.
- Subsidized housing
- Government-assisted affordable housing where rent is reduced based on income; victim Wendy Coffield's mother moved into subsidized housing after her divorce.
- Medical examiner
- A physician who performs autopsies and officially determines cause of death in criminal or unexplained fatalities; played a central role in identifying Green River victims and their causes of death.
- Hyoid bone
- A small U-shaped bone in the throat; fracture of the hyoid is a common indicator of death by strangulation, referenced when discussing the inability to determine Shonda Summers's cause of death.
- Sex work / sex worker
- Terms for the exchange of sexual services for money; used throughout the episode to describe the occupation of several victims and the way police systematically under-prioritized their cases.
- Task force
- A temporary team assembled from multiple agencies or units to focus resources on a specific investigative problem; the Green River Task Force was a 25-person group formed in 1982.
- Decomposition
- The biological breakdown of organic matter after death; advanced decomposition in several Green River victims made identification and cause-of-death determination very difficult.
- Staged crime scene
- A murder scene deliberately manipulated by the perpetrator to mislead investigators, either about the cause of death or the identity of the killer; Carol Ann Christensen's scene was staged with food and a paper bag.
- Sexual psychopath
- An older clinical term for a person who commits sexual violence driven by compulsive or predatory psychological impulses; used by investigators and the press to describe the likely Green River Killer profile.
- Prolific
- Producing a great quantity; used here to describe serial killers who claim unusually large numbers of victims, as with Gary Ridgway (49 convictions, 65 confessed) and Samuel Little (93 victims).
- Informant
- A person who provides information to law enforcement, sometimes as a strategy to insert oneself into an investigation; suspect Melvin Foster offered to act as an informant, which raised detectives' suspicions.
Chapter 2 · 01:34
Introducing the Case: Gary Ridgway, the Green River Killer
Alaina announces upfront that this is a four-part series because Gary Ridgway's case is so vast. She explains that Ridgway was long considered the most prolific serial killer in American history but has since been surpassed by Samuel Little, who killed at least 93 known victims. The hosts issue a frank content warning: the episode contains graphic descriptions, rape, and victims as young as 15 and 16 years old. Ash and Alaina agree to skip any lighthearted intro business and dive directly into the case, setting a sober, respectful tone from the start.
Claims made here
For decades Gary Ridgway was considered the most prolific serial killer in American history. He isn't anymore. Samuel Little killed at least 93 people that authorities know of, surpassing Ridgway's staggering total.
Samuel Little surpassed Gary Ridgway as the most prolific serial killer in the United States, with 93 known victims.
Chapter 3 · 03:19
The First Victim: Wendy Coffield, July 1982
Wendy Coffield's story is one of quiet desperation: after her parents divorced, she moved with her mother from a farm to subsidized housing and began drifting. After two theft arrests — including stealing food stamps to help her mother — she was placed in a foster home. On July 8th she left to visit her grandmother and never arrived. A week later, two boys on bikes spotted her nude body tangled in branches along the Green River, her pants tied tightly around her neck. The only meaningful physical evidence was an unusual industrial spray paint on those pants, which led nowhere. Detectives knew she had been sexually assaulted, but a week in the water had washed away nearly all forensic evidence. Wendy's case went cold almost immediately — just one more tragic story in a region already too familiar with young women disappearing.
Two boys on bikes spotted a nude body tangled in the branches of the Green River — the first known victim of Gary Ridgway. Wendy Coffield was only 16, recently removed from her mother's care, trying to help her family survive, and the police had almost nothing to go on.
Chapter 4 · 08:07
Deborah Lynn Bonner and the Pattern Begins: August 12, 1982
On August 12, 1982, P.D.J. Meat Company employee Frank Leonard stepped outside for a cigar break and noticed the water churning strangely below the old slaughterhouse — then realized he was looking at a woman's body. By the time officers arrived, nearly the entire factory crew had gathered at the scene. King County Detective David Reichert, already a hardened veteran who had survived being stabbed in the neck multiple times while rescuing a trapped woman, arrived and found 21-year-old Deborah Lynn Bonner face down in the current, her hands raised as if waving or reaching for help. The last known sighting of Deborah was July 25th, when she left the Three Bears Motel to 'catch some dates.' The Bonner family pointed detectives toward her boyfriend Martin as a possible suspect. Barely had Reichert begun to pursue that lead when the next report came in.
Claims made here
Detective David Reichert had been stabbed in the neck multiple times by a suspect after breaking into a home to rescue a trapped woman, years before the Green River case.
Lead detective David Reichert had previously been stabbed in the neck multiple times while rescuing a woman trapped in a home, yet the Green River crime scene still deeply rattled him.
Chapter 5 · 11:54
Three More Bodies: August 15, 1982 and the Serial Killer Confirmation
Three days after finding Deborah Bonner, a rubber raft treasure hunter on the Green River came upon two nude women half-submerged along the bank. He spotted a young man on the shore who waved politely, then walked to a pickup truck and drove away. When Reichert arrived and walked the banks himself — crawling through tall weeds on his hands and knees — he came face to face with a third body: a teenage girl, partially dressed, her pants tied around her neck in the same fashion as Wendy Coffield's. The three victims were identified as 31-year-old Marcia Chapman, 17-year-old Cynthia Hines, and 16-year-old Opal Mills. At a press conference the following day, officials confirmed to the public that one suspect was likely responsible for all five deaths, making it official: there was a serial killer on the loose in the Tacoma area.
Reichert had barely begun following up on the lead about Deborah Bonner's boyfriend when the next report came in — not just one body this time, but two. Then a third in the weeds. The killer was moving faster than any task force could track.
A man treasure hunting in a rubber raft on the Green River suddenly found two half-submerged women along the bank. He also spotted a young man on shore who waved politely — then walked to his pickup and drove away.
David Reichert arrived at a routine report of two bodies floating in the Green River. When he got down on his hands and knees to push through the tall grass, he came face to face with a third. Three women, one crime scene: Marcia Chapman, Cynthia Hines, and Opal Mills.
On August 15, 1982, Detective David Reichert discovered three women's bodies at a single location along the Green River banks.
Stricter enforcement against sex workers in the Tacoma region made them far less likely to report assaults or cooperate with police, increasing their vulnerability.
Chapter 6 · 18:20
The Victims in Detail: Sex Work Stigma and Opal Mills' Story
Alaina takes time to tell each victim's story with care. Marcia Chapman was a mother of three young children living on the SeaTac Strip who left her apartment telling her children she'd be back soon. Cynthia Hines, 17, had a self-described 'protector' who was really a pimp and who watched her get into a black Jeep without writing down the plate. Then came Opal Mills — a 16-year-old who spent her time in church and with her family, a curious outlier with no sex work history whatsoever. The press, however, made no such distinction, and a school official told a reporter that 'Opal's pimp picked her up from school the day she went missing.' That pimp? Her brother, who was simply making sure she got home safely. The episode also reveals the grotesque detail from Marcia Chapman's autopsy: the killer had placed small stones inside her so tightly they required surgical removal.
Claims made here
Marcia Chapman's body showed evidence of post-mortem sexual assault with several small stones placed inside her so tightly they had to be surgically removed.
Opal Mills was a churchgoing 16-year-old with a close family and no history of sex work. Then a school official told a reporter that her 'pimp' picked her up the day she disappeared. That 'pimp' was her brother making sure she got home safely.
Chapter 7 · 25:30
Law Enforcement Failures and the Missing Week: Giselle LaVorne
The formation of a 25-person task force — King County's largest investigation since the Bundy slayings — should have represented a turning point. But investigators were so consumed by their five known victims and the tip hotline that they never checked open missing persons cases, which might have revealed the killer's weekly pace. Giselle LaVorne's story is perhaps the most damning example: she disappeared July 17th, exactly between Wendy Coffield and Deborah Bonner. Her partner James Tyndall filed a report, offered investigators a list of her regular clients, and begged them to take it seriously. Officers told him she'd turn up. She did — nude, with men's socks tied around her neck, found in underbrush near the airport months later. The episode also explores the systemic failure of the era: 600 teenagers lived on the streets of King County, and police operated on the assumption that missing adults, especially sex workers, had simply chosen to vanish.
Claims made here
The Green River Task Force assembled by Dick Kraski consisted of 25 people and was described as the largest murder investigation in the department since the Ted Bundy slayings in the mid-1970s.
The three victims found on August 15, 1982 were all last seen alive within 2 weeks of their bodies being discovered.
At the time of the Green River murders, police generally did not investigate missing persons reports seriously if the missing person was an adult or a teenager with a sex work arrest record.
An estimated 600 teenagers were living on the streets of King County in the early 1980s, many supporting themselves through sex work.
Giselle LaVorne's body was estimated by the medical examiner to have been at the discovery site for 4 to 6 weeks, placing her death between the murders of Wendy Coffield and Deborah Bonner.
King County Sheriff Dick Kraski assembled a 25-person task force to investigate the Green River murders, described as the largest investigation since the Ted Bundy killings.
By mid-August 1982, five women had been found murdered in and around the Green River within a single month, alarming both law enforcement and the public.
There were 600 teenagers living on the streets of King County alone. Police operated under a blanket assumption that missing adults — especially sex workers — had chosen to vanish. That institutional indifference gave Gary Ridgway cover to kill for years.
At the time of the killings, an estimated 600 teenagers were living on the streets of King County, many supporting themselves through sex work.
Giselle LaVorne vanished right between the first and second confirmed Green River victims. Her partner filed a report. He even offered a list of her clients. Detectives told him she'd turn up — and they were right, but not in the way they meant. Her body was found months later.
Looking back at the early victims' timelines, Ridgway was taking a new victim approximately every week. The police had the missing persons reports; they just never connected the dots.
Analysis of early victim disappearances revealed that the Green River Killer was claiming a new victim approximately every week in the summer of 1982.
Chapter 10 · 42:00
FBI Profile and the First Suspect: Melvin Foster
In the fall of 1982, the Green River Task Force enlisted the FBI's Behavioral Analysis Unit — the group immortalized in the show Mindhunter, which Alaina briefly laments was cancelled. The resulting profile pointed to a man familiar with the area who had contact with sex workers. That description fit Melvin Foster, an unemployed cab driver who had inserted himself into the investigation by offering to be an informant. He failed a polygraph and became the primary suspect. But critical details didn't add up: a March 1982 knee injury would have made carrying bodies physically impossible, and his car was broken down around the time the victims were being transported to dump sites. Within months, Foster was ruled out entirely, and the task force was right back where they started — seven victims, no suspects.
Claims made here
Suspect Melvin Foster sustained a knee cartilage injury in March 1982 that would have made it difficult or impossible for him to carry a body.
Melvin Foster failed a polygraph and fit the FBI's profile perfectly: familiar with the area, contact with sex workers, inserted himself into the investigation. But a knee injury and a broken car made it physically impossible for him to be the killer. Months later, the task force was back to zero.
First suspect Melvin Foster was ruled out partly because a knee injury in March 1982 would have made it impossible for him to carry body weights to dump sites.
Chapter 11 · 45:20
Carol Ann Christensen: The Staged Scene
Carol Ann Christensen was 22 years old, a mother of five, and had just secured her first waitressing job after months of unemployment. On May 3rd, 1983, she disappeared while walking to work. Her body was found five days later in Maple Valley, about 20 miles from the strip — a disturbing departure from every previous Green River crime scene. The body had been posed: hands folded across her chest with ground sausage placed on them, two gutted trout laid across her throat, an empty wine bottle across her stomach, and a paper bag over her head. Her bra was on inside out and her shoes were unlaced. Investigators debated whether this was a different killer entirely, but the washerwoman wrinkles on her skin suggested recent immersion in water — a Green River signature. A paper bag was traced to a grocery store near the killer's known hunting grounds. Investigators concluded the elaborate staging was likely Ridgway's attempt to throw off detectives, and it nearly worked.
Claims made here
The medical examiner found washerwoman wrinkles on Carol Ann Christensen's hands and feet, suggesting the body had been immersed in water for some time before being staged in the woods.
Carol Ann Christensen had just started her first waitressing job and had five children at home. When her body was found in the woods 20 miles from the strip, there were gutted trout across her throat, ground sausage on her hands, and a paper bag over her head. The staging nearly worked — investigators almost didn't connect it to the Green River Killer.
Victim Carol Ann Christensen was a mother of five young children who had just landed her first waitressing job when she was killed.
Carol Ann Christensen's body was discovered about 20 miles from the Pacific Highway Strip where most other Green River victims were found, in a staged scene unlike any previous crime.
Chapter 12 · 51:30
Shonda Summers and the True Victim Count
Shonda Summers left her family in San Diego to live with her father in Seattle, but after being arrested on a prostitution charge and her father refusing to post bail, she took off with her boyfriend. In October 1982, she vanished — and it took nearly a month for anyone to even file a missing persons report, with no one able to clearly recall the last time they'd seen her. Her badly decomposed body was found in August 1983 by an apple-picking couple near the strip, close to where Giselle LaVorne had been discovered the year before. Advanced decomposition made it impossible to determine cause of death. The task force added her to the list as victim number 9. But Alaina drops the chilling corrective: Shonda was actually victim number 12 — the true order of Ridgway's crimes wouldn't be untangled for years.
Claims made here
By the time investigators counted Shonda Summers as victim number 9, Gary Ridgway had actually already killed 12 women.
By the time investigators counted 9 Green River victims, Ridgway had actually already killed 12 women — the true order of killings remained unknown for years.
Chapter 13 · 55:30
Part 1 Wrap-Up, Final Victim Count, and Palate Cleanser
Alaina caps Part 1 by noting that by the end of 1983, the Green River Killer was far from done — and lays out his ultimate known tally: convicted of 49 murders, he later confessed to 65. The hosts share a moment of disbelief that such an 'unremarkable little rat' could operate for so long, from the early 1980s into the 1990s. Ash observes that the idea of his face being the last you'd ever see is uniquely horrifying. To offer listeners a palate cleanser before signing off, Ash shares a fun fact: the average person in Sweden eats about 22 pounds of chocolate per year, prompting a brief, warm tangent about Swedish gummy candy and a recommendation to seek out Sweetish Candy.
Claims made here
Gary Ridgway was convicted of murdering 49 young women and girls.
Gary Ridgway later confessed to killing 65 people total.
Gary Ridgway was convicted of murdering 49 young women and girls — and then admitted to 65. He operated from the early 1980s into the 1990s. When you finally see who he is, the question is how this unremarkable little man got away with it for so long.
Gary Ridgway was convicted of murdering 49 young women and girls, making him one of the most prolific serial killers in American history.
Beyond his 49 convictions, Gary Ridgway later admitted to murdering 65 people in total.
Gary Ridgway operated as a serial killer from the early 1980s into the 1990s — nearly a decade — before being caught.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
Show stoppers
Snapshots ()
Key Quotes ()
This episode
Cast
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The Green River Killer, subject of this 4-part series; convicted of 49 murders and later confessed to 65.
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King County Major Crimes Detective who was first on the scene for multiple Green River victims and led much of the early investigation.
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22-year-old mother of five who had just started a waitressing job; her staged crime scene nearly prevented her from being identified as a Green River victim.
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16-year-old first known victim of Gary Ridgway, whose body was found in the Green River in July 1982.
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16-year-old Green River victim with no history of sex work, who was falsely characterized in the press as a sex worker.
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21-year-old victim found floating face down in the Green River on August 12, 1982.
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17-year-old Green River victim whose missing persons report was dismissed by police; her decomposed body was found months after she vanished.
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Unemployed cab driver who became the Green River Task Force's first major suspect before being ruled out due to a physical injury and broken car.
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18-year-old Green River victim listed as victim number 9 by investigators, though Ridgway had actually already killed 12 women by then.
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17-year-old Green River victim found in the river on August 15, 1982, who had a so-called 'protector' who was really a pimp.
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31-year-old Green River victim and mother of three, found in the river on August 15, 1982.
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Referenced as a prior Pacific Northwest serial killer whose case shaped how law enforcement approached the Green River investigation.
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Cited as the current most prolific serial killer in the United States with 93 known victims, surpassing Gary Ridgway.
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25-person King County law enforcement team assembled to investigate the Green River murders, described as the largest investigation since the Bundy slayings.
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Federal Bureau of Investigation unit that assisted the Green River Task Force in building a criminal profile of the killer in 1982.
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Washington State river that gave Gary Ridgway his moniker; multiple victims' bodies were dumped in or along its banks.
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Washington State county encompassing the Seattle-Tacoma metropolitan area, where most Green River murders took place and the task force was based.
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Washington State city in the broader region where the Green River killings took place and local law enforcement initially responded.
Stats
This episode
Claims & Sources
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
Samuel Little is now considered the most prolific serial killer in the United States, having killed at least 93 people that authorities know of.
Gary Ridgway was convicted of murdering 49 young women and girls.
Gary Ridgway later confessed to killing 65 people total.
An estimated 600 teenagers were living on the streets of King County in the early 1980s, many supporting themselves through sex work.
The Green River Task Force assembled by Dick Kraski consisted of 25 people and was described as the largest murder investigation in the department since the Ted Bundy slayings in the mid-1970s.
Suspect Melvin Foster sustained a knee cartilage injury in March 1982 that would have made it difficult or impossible for him to carry a body.
At the time of the Green River murders, police generally did not investigate missing persons reports seriously if the missing person was an adult or a teenager with a sex work arrest record.
The three victims found on August 15, 1982 were all last seen alive within 2 weeks of their bodies being discovered.
Marcia Chapman's body showed evidence of post-mortem sexual assault with several small stones placed inside her so tightly they had to be surgically removed.
The medical examiner found washerwoman wrinkles on Carol Ann Christensen's hands and feet, suggesting the body had been immersed in water for some time before being staged in the woods.
Giselle LaVorne's body was estimated by the medical examiner to have been at the discovery site for 4 to 6 weeks, placing her death between the murders of Wendy Coffield and Deborah Bonner.
Detective David Reichert had been stabbed in the neck multiple times by a suspect after breaking into a home to rescue a trapped woman, years before the Green River case.
By the time investigators counted Shonda Summers as victim number 9, Gary Ridgway had actually already killed 12 women.
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