A serial killer may be working as a long-haul truck driver in the United States.
Analysts are pointing to a pattern of murders – mostly episodic lifestyles involving drug abuse and prostitution – for women found murdered and abandoned along Interstate 40 in Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas and Mississippi. After becoming aware of the crime, the FBI launched the Highway Serial Killer Initiative in 2009. Go to that website.
Using the Violent Crime Apprehension Program, a national database among law enforcement agencies that includes information on homicides, sexual assaults, missing persons, and unidentified bodies, analysts tracked hundreds of cases along highways across the country. Collected a list of several victims and hundreds of suspects. -Transport truck driver.
Frank Figliuzzi, a former FBI deputy director who worked for 25 years, published a book this year called “The Long Haul: Hunting the Highway Serial Killer.''
In his book, he writes that about 850 murders have occurred along America's highways since 1980, and about 200 of them are unsolved.
“Often, the people most at risk of being kidnapped or harmed by a serial killer are those who are least visible, have the least connections to their families, and may or may not have a trafficker. '' Dominic said. “There's no need to worry,” said Ro Sepowitz, director of Arizona State University's Sex Trafficking Intervention Laboratory.
“Casual Reference” [to a woman selling sex at truck stops along interstate highways] It's “Rot Lizard”. They are often very temporary and often suffer from substance abuse disorders. They are very likely to be overlooked and easily seduced by truckers with money,” she says. “This is a low level of testing and a low level of personal safety.”
According to a report from NPR, there are between 300,000 and 500,000 long-haul truck drivers in the United States, the vast majority of whom are skilled workers who work to maintain supply chains.
However, the mobile nature of truckers' lifestyles and the multiple jurisdictions they travel to result in a lack of witnesses and cases in which they pick up, kill, and dump vulnerable sex workers and transients. You are less likely to be arrested.
F.B.I.
“25 long-haul truck drivers already jailed for multiple murders'' Figliuzzi told NewsNation. “We also have cases in the greater Cincinnati area and the greater Ohio area.”
According to the FBI's website, the program has led to the arrest of suspected murderers across the United States.
Richard J. Kolko, Supervisory Special Agent in Charge of the FBI's Office of National Reporting, told Fox News Digital last week that the program is “no more” but did not provide details on the program's outcome or what led to its termination. There wasn't.
Law Sepowitz said the canceled programs are “just another cut in a very bloody situation where vulnerable women are simply not being seen.”
“This is another way in which people can use and participate in violence against girls and women,” she said. “Traffickers cannot be tracked nationally.”
“Without a force at the FBI level or interstate level, there is nothing that connects these crimes,” she continued. “This is a loss of intelligence. Who else is looking for patterns? No one has the answer.”
Law Sepowitz pointed out that most long-haul truck drivers are certainly not serial killers or sex traffickers.
In fact, an organization called Truckers Against Trafficking has trained 235,329 truck drivers to spot and intervene in human trafficking situations, according to its website.
“Truck drivers aren't necessarily the bad guys,” Law Sepowitz said. “They can be part of the solution. They can look for victims. They can help rescue people. They can be part of our caring and loving community. But something needs to change.”





