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Joseph Naso claims he killed 22 additional people.

Joseph Naso claims he killed 22 additional people.

Allegations from Serial Killer Joseph Naso

Joseph Naso, a convicted serial killer, has reportedly claimed he killed an additional 22 women, maintaining a list of his victims, according to fellow inmates.

Now 91, Naso is serving time in California after being found guilty of four murders where the victims’ first and last names shared the same initials.

He allegedly expressed that his total number of victims is 26 and referred to some as his “big hits,” as reported by inmate Bill Noguera.

Interestingly, Naso was described as being upset when one of his supposed victims was linked to Rodney Alcala, known as “The Dating Game Killer.” Noguera, incarcerated since 1988 for murdering his girlfriend, shared that Naso designated the 10 victims he spoke of as his notable killings.

According to Naso, he murdered a 19-year-old named Pamela Rambson, under the pretense of taking nude photographs while posing as a professional photographer.

Naso, previously working as a school photographer, along with a former Little League coach, raped and killed Rambson, who he called “a girl from Berkeley,” in late 1977. Noguera recounted how Naso’s fascination with celebrity and exposure drew him into the dark world of exploitation.

Noguera noted that Naso was particularly irate about Alcala being wrongfully associated with Rambson’s murder, frequently expressing his discontent about it.

Naso reportedly enjoyed taking photos of his victims before killing them and had a specific fascination with the thrill of the hunt, often quoting disturbing lyrics that resonated with his violent tendencies.

While Naso was once suspected in a notorious string of murders referred to as the “Alphabet Murders,” authorities cleared him, stating that his DNA did not match those found at the crime scenes. This case involved the abduction and murder of three young girls in the 1970s in Rochester, New York, where Naso is from. The case remains unsolved.

After years of conversation with Naso, Noguera mentioned that the serial killer’s alleged poor hygiene made it difficult for him to tolerate being in the same space.

Naso was convicted in 2013 for the murders of four women in California, including 18-year-old Roxen Loggas in 1977 and Carmen Colon, 22, in 1978. Other victims included Pamela Parsons, 38, in 1993, and Tracy Tafoya, 31, in 1994.

A new documentary titled “Death Row Confidential: Secrets of a Serial Killer” is set to premiere on Oxygen on September 13th.

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