The New England authorities do not share “enough” information to destroy speculation about a serial killer after the recent discoveries of 12 sets of human remains between March and April, according to former FBI instructor and certified police instructor Scott Duffey.
The discoveries of 12 human remains in Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts between March and April, with few details of the police about how the 12 victims died, have led rumors about a serial killer online.
“From what I have seen or heard, in the first place, not enough is placed there, so we continue to make that serial killer an idea,” Duffey said about searching on social media.
“But at the same time nothing has been said that it makes a connection [between victims]. And so that is what leads me to … Let law enforcement continue to answer the questions they have to answer. But nothing I have seen would perform a serial killer [being] Responsible for one or most of these people found. ‘
The former FBI researcher, who originally came from Norwalk, said that, after he had looked at the information about the 12 dead, he reassures his family from his conviction that there is no serial killer who roamed in New England.
“Personally, I don’t think there is someone on the loose targeting -women in New England … along the waterways and paths,” Duffey said.
“But at the same time you can ignore a serial killer, but don’t let you down … … a person who wants to take advantage of a vulnerable situation will do this … I always talk about the Buddy system. If you are going to run, if you go dark somewhere, and you will be outside … Walking, whatever, you have someone with you, your phone.”
Of the 12 bodies in the three states in the past two months, few developments have been done in the respective cases of the victims, but the police are investigating each of them.
Last week, however, the Connecticut police arrested a man named Donald Coffel in connection with the murder of a Groton woman, his roommate, Suzanne Wormser, who was found in a suitcase in March and was put in a suitcase.
The police said that a provisional investigation has shown that he reportedly killed her about a fight about crack cocaine.
The State Police of Connecticut recently told FOX News Digital that “there is no information that is currently suggesting a connection with similar remains discoveries, and there is currently no known threat to the public”, with regard to the dead in Connecticut.
Other remains are located in New Haven, Norwalk, Groton, Killingly and Rocky Hill, Connecticut; Foster and Pawtucket, Rhode Island; and Framingham, Plymouth, Springfield and two bodies in Taunton, Massachusetts.
Some detective noses on social media say that these discoveries of human remains, in particular female remains, can indicate a serial killer in the three adjacent states, but the police have not done an indication that that is the case.
“It doesn’t take much to create a conspiracy,” said Duffey. “And if you have a vacuum of information … And then a person really postponed a logical idea, and it catches, and then people begin to follow that idea, although there is no evidence to support it.”
The rumors of the serial killer, who come from a private Facebook group with nearly 70,000 users who were all looking for answers around these recent morbid discoveries, also led the police of Rhode Island on a hunt for clandestine Graves along Narragansett Beach after an anonymous member of the group had made a horror of confession.
“It seemed that someone was trying to get an increase. I mean, he referred to Rick Rolling [in] The group, he referred to this prose. One of his poems has actually described the word ‘Hoax’ if you have spelled the first letter of the paragraphs, ‘det. Sgt. Brent Kuzman told Fox News Digital Thursday. “So it seemed pretty clear that this was a bit something, but I never want to be the person who did nothing.”
His colleague officers agreed and they released a few resources on April 21 for searches on April 22 with cadaver dogs. The searches came negative.
Duffey believes that the police in the area that have been called to respond to suspicious deaths will have an eye on the Facebook page and related social media discussions.
“The mystery is definitely a hook,” he said. “And just like everyone else, I am waiting for more and more answers to come out. But I also think that with what has come out, it is strong that it is precisely that – a series of circumstances that have caught a whirlwind of social media – and now law enforcement has to pent a bit with evidence and information that comes out of credible sources.”
The Facebook group has collected nearly 20,000 new members in the past month. Search for “New England Serial Killer” on Google Spiked around 7 April, according to data from the search engine.
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