Edgecombe County serial killer

Last updated
Edgecombe County serial killer
Other names"The Seven Bridges Killer"
Conviction(s) Murder x1 (Pittman)
Criminal penalty Life imprisonment (Pittman)
Details
Victims10–11
Span of crimes
2005–2009
CountryUnited States
State(s) North Carolina
Date apprehended
Never apprehended

The Edgecombe County serial killer is an unidentified serial killer in the surroundings of Edgecombe and Halifax counties in North Carolina, United States. There are ten suspected victims, all African-American women, and the remains of eight have been recovered. Because some of the victims had been found near the Seven Bridges Road in Rocky Mount, the culprit has also been called The Seven Bridges Killer. All the victims were black, engaged in prostitution and had problems with drug addiction at various times. [1] [2] [3]

Contents

History

The first victim of the killer was a Rocky Mount woman: 29-year-old Melody Wiggins was reported missing on May 30, 2005, with her partially stripped body being found on June 2 in rural Edgecombe County. Following a forensic autopsy, it was established that the woman had received several knife wounds and blows from a blunt object to the head, which proved to be fatal. [4]

On January 16, 2007, relatives of 43-year-old Christine Mary Boone contacted the police to report her as missing. The initial search proved unsuccessful, until her skeletonized remains were found on March 9, 2010. [5]

On May 8, 2007, Jackie Nikelia Thorpe was reported missing. Her corpse, in a state of severe decomposition, was found on August 17 near the Seven Bridges Road. She was the first victim whose remains were found at this location. [6]

On the afternoon of June 17, 46-year-old Joyce Renee Durham was seen for the last time in Rocky Mount. As of December 2023, she has not been located.

In February 2008, 50-year-old Ernestine Battle went missing, her skeletonized remains found on March 14 by a farmer near the Seven Bridges Road. Since the body was in a state of severe decomposition, the medical examiner was unable to establish the cause of death.

A year later, on February 5, 2009, 36-year-old Yolanda Rene Lancaster was also reported missing. In January 2011, her remains were found in a wooded area off the Seven Bridges Road by a group of hunters. [7] [8] [9]

About a week later, the body of 33-year-old Elizabeth Jane Smallwood was found on a soccer field in Rocky Mount. During the investigation, it was established that she didn't maintain contact with her relatives, due to which her exact date of disappearance is unclear. Based on the state of her body, it was determined that she had been killed approximately six months before the body was found. [10] Smallwood was the sister of serial killer Robert Smallwood. [11]

On February 22, 28-year-old Taraha Shenice Nicholson was reported missing, with her body later found on March 7 near the Seven Bridges Road. After an autopsy, it was concluded that she had been strangled to death. [12] [13]

On April 25, relatives of 31-year-old Jarniece Latonya Hargrove contacted the police to report her disappearance. The initial search proved fruitless, until her remains were discovered on June 29 in a wooded area, a few yards away from the Seven Bridges Road. [14] [2]

On March 27, 2010, a man riding an ATV found the body of 40-year-old Roberta Williams by the side of the Seven Bridges Road. While investigating her killing, her relatives claimed that they had filed a statement to the authorities about Roberta's vanishing, which was subsequently denied by law enforcement. [15]

Investigation

While examining the murders, traces of sperm were found on Nicholson's body, which, according to the investigators, led to her killer. After a DNA examination, the biological traces were linked to Antwan Pittman, a convicted felon residing in Rocky Mount. At the beginning of September 2009, he was charged with Taraha Nicholson's murder. [16]

Main suspect

Pittman was born on July 15, 1978, in Rocky Mount, where he was raised by his single mother. During his school years, he began to engage in criminal activities, and in 1994, he was arrested on charges of attempting to rape a 2-year-old child. As part of a plea deal, he pleaded guilty to indecent behavior, and in that July was released on probation. During the probationary period, he was obliged to spend 90 days in rehabilitation institution for juvenile offenders, but was quickly expelled after a month following a fight, after which he was placed under house arrest. In January 1996, after committing several offences, Pittman was arrested for violating his parole, after which he was again sent to a juvenile correction center, where he remained until mid-1997. In subsequent years, he would be charged with theft, assault, resisting arrest and giving alcohol to minors. In 2003, Antwan served 45 days in a county jail for hiding the fact that he was a registered sex offender in the state while applying for a job. During this time, a blood sample was taken from him. In 2004, he was convicted of drunk driving, for which he spent another few weeks in jail. In 2007, he was arrested for assaulting a prostitute, in the same area where the other victims had been killed. In the spring of 2009, Pittman was arrested once again for driving under the influence, but was released after his bail was paid. After failing to appear in court for his trial, he was listed as a fugitive and thereafter arrested in Nash County in August. He was lodged in the county jail yet again, where he would soon be charged with Nicholson's murder. Due to circumstantial evidence, investigators began to suspect that Pittman might be responsible for the other killings. It turned out that he often visited the area near Seven Bridges Road since, as a teenager, he had lived for several years at his grandparents' home in Whitakers, which was located only a few miles away from where Nicholson, Williams, Thorpe, Battle and Hargrove's bodies were later found. Prior to his arrest, he had lived in Rocky Mount for six years, including in a one-storey brick building on the outskirts of town, which was not far from Seven Bridges Road. In 2005, he briefly lived in a house located near the soccer field where Smallwood's body would later be found. [17]

In 2006, Pittman lived for several weeks in a trailer in Scotland Neck, where in March 2010, Christine Boone's corpse would be found in a wooded area not far from the trailer. In addition, Antwan was detained by traffic police at Seven Bridges Road on the same day that another victim, Hargrove, mysteriously disappeared. He was found unconscious in his car with his pants lowered, after which he was awakened and interrogated, and later charged with drunk driving. Two months later, Hargrove's body was found in a field 180 yards away. [18]

At his trial, Antwan was forced to admit that he knew Taraha. According to him, six days before her body was discovered, he put her in his car and paid for her sexual services. After they had sex, he dropped the girl off near the library in downtown Rocky Mount, and never saw her again. In September 2011, Antwan Pittman was found guilty of Taraha Nicholson's murder and sentenced to life imprisonment without parole. [19]

Despite the fact that he was never charged with the other murders, the media and police have identified him as responsible for them, since, according to the official version provided by law enforcement, the killings ceased after his arrest. [20] [2]

Public awareness

In July 2012, a charity motorcycle ride was held for the five women found murdered. The ride was organized to help raise awareness for the nine women found dead who are suspected to be victims of the Edgecombe killer. [21]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Aileen Wuornos</span> American serial killer (1956–2002)

Aileen Carol Wuornos was an American serial killer. In 1989–1990, while engaging in street prostitution along highways in Florida, she shot dead and robbed seven of her male clients. Wuornos claimed that her clients had either raped or attempted to rape her, and that the homicides of the men were committed in self-defense. Wuornos was sentenced to death for six of the murders. She was executed on October 9, 2002, by lethal injection after spending more than 10 years on Florida's death row.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gary Ridgway</span> American serial killer (born 1949)

Gary Leon Ridgway is an American serial killer known as the Green River Killer. He was initially convicted of 48 separate murders committed between the early 1980s and late 1990s. As part of his plea bargain, another conviction was added, bringing the total number of convictions to 49, making him the second-most prolific serial killer in United States history according to confirmed murders.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Robert Hansen</span> American serial killer (1939–2014)

Robert Christian Boes Hansen, popularly known as the Butcher Baker, was an American serial killer active in Anchorage, Alaska, between 1972 and 1983. Hansen abducted, raped and murdered at least seventeen women. Many of the women abducted were released by Hansen into the wilderness and hunted with a Ruger Mini-14 and hunting knives. Hansen was captured in 1983 and sentenced to 461 years' imprisonment without the possibility of parole. He died in 2014 of natural causes at age 75.

Autopsy is a television series of HBO's America Undercover documentary series. Dr. Michael Baden, a real-life forensic pathologist, is the primary analyst, and has been personally involved in many of the cases that are reviewed.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">David Carpenter</span> American serial killer on death row

David Joseph Carpenter, also known as The Trailside Killer, is an American serial killer and serial rapist known for stalking and murdering a variety of individuals on hiking trails in state parks near San Francisco, California. He attacked at least ten individuals and was convicted in seven murders and was confirmed to be the killer in an eighth murder; Carpenter is also suspected in two additional killings. Two victims, Steven Haertle and Lois Rinna, mother of television personality Lisa Rinna, survived. Carpenter used a .38 caliber handgun in all but one of the killings. A .44 caliber handgun was used in the killing of Edda Kane on Mount Tamalpais.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Paul Durousseau</span> American serial killer

Paul Durousseau is an American serial killer who murdered seven young women in the southeastern United States between 1997 and 2003. German authorities suspect he may have also killed several local women when he was stationed there with the United States Army during the early 1990s. Typically, Durousseau would gain the victim's trust, enter the victim's home, tie their hands, rape, then strangle them to death. All of his known victims were young, single African-American women.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gilgo Beach serial killings</span> American serial killer case

The Gilgo Beach serial killings were a series of murders spanning from the early 1990s until 2011. Many of the victims' remains were found over a period of months in 2010 and 2011 during a police search of the area along Ocean Parkway, near the remote beach towns of Gilgo and Oak Beach in Suffolk County, New York. The search was prompted by the disappearance of Shannan Gilbert, who, like many of the known victims, was a sex worker who advertised on Craigslist. The perpetrator in the case is known as the Long Island Serial Killer, the Manorville Butcher, or the Craigslist Ripper.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Roger Kibbe</span> American serial killer (1939–2021)

Roger Reece Kibbe was an American serial killer and rapist known as the "I-5 Strangler". Kibbe found all but one of his victims on freeways around Sacramento, California. In 1991, he was sentenced to 25 years to life imprisonment for the death of Darcie Frackenpohl.

Cody Alan Legebokoff is a Canadian serial killer convicted in 2014 by the British Columbia Supreme Court of murdering three women and one teenage girl, between 2009 and 2010, in or near the city of Prince George, British Columbia. He is one of Canada's youngest convicted serial killers, and his trial drew national attention. One of his victims, the 23-year-old Natasha Lynn Montgomery, has been included in the list of missing women and girls suspected as victims in the Highway of Tears murders.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Darren Deon Vann</span> American serial killer (born 1971)

Darren Deon Vann is an American serial killer. He was arrested on October 18, 2014, for the murder of 19-year-old Afrikka Hardy at a Motel 6 in Hammond, Indiana and has confessed to the murders of six other female victims in Indiana. He led police to those women's bodies, all of which were found in five abandoned structures in Gary, Indiana.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Yevgeny Chuplinsky</span> Russian serial killer

Yevgeny Alexandrovich Chuplinsky, known as The Novosibirsk Maniac, is a Russian serial killer who killed at least 19 prostitutes in the Novosibirsk Oblast from 1998 to 2005. The murders were accompanied by dismemberment, extensive mutilations and removal of victims' hearts. Despite large-scale investigations by police and several arrests, Chuplinsky was only arrested in 2016, and sentenced to life imprisonment two years later.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Terry Peder Rasmussen</span> American serial killer (1943–2010)

Terry Peder Rasmussen was an American convicted murderer and suspected serial killer who was convicted of one murder, and linked to at least five more in a series of crimes that stretched across the contiguous United States between 1978 and 2002. Due to his use of many aliases, most notably "Bob Evans", Rasmussen is known as the Chameleon Killer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Samuel Little</span> American serial killer (1940–2020)

Samuel Little was an American serial killer who confessed to murdering 93 people, nearly all women, between 1970 and 2005. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)'s Violent Criminal Apprehension Program (ViCAP) has confirmed Little's involvement in at least 60 of the 93 confessed murders, the largest number of confirmed victims for any serial killer in United States history.

Dr. No is the nickname given to a suspected American serial killer thought to be responsible for the murders of at least nine women and girls in Ohio, between 1981 and 1990. As victims, Dr. No primarily chose prostitutes working in parking lots and truck stops located alongside Interstate 71. There are suspicions that he committed three similar killings in New York, Illinois, and Pennsylvania, between 1986 and 1988.

The Denver Prostitute Killer was an unidentified American serial killer responsible for the murder of at least 17 women and girls in Denver and its various suburbs between 1975 and 1995. In 2005, based upon results from DNA profiling, it was determined that the most likely killer was Billy Edwin Reid who was previously arrested and charged with the 1989 murder of Lannell Williams and Lisa Kelly. Reid was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for those specific murders. The killings were grouped together only in 2008 – until then, each of these crimes was considered to have been committed by different people.

Terry Alvin Hyatt is an American serial killer who killed at least three women in North Carolina from 1979 to 1987. Convicted and sentenced to death for two of them, he was linked to the third via DNA profiling in 2005, pleading guilty and receiving a life term. He is currently housed at Central Prison in Raleigh, awaiting execution.

The 1996 Raleigh murders were a series of six murders and several rapes targeted towards female residents of the Raleigh, North Carolina area occurring from January to December 1996. At the time, the investigating authorities believed the killings to be the work of a serial killer, and the cases were investigated under that belief.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Robert Smallwood (serial killer)</span> American serial killer and rapist (born 1973)

Robert Franklin Smallwood Jr. is an American convicted serial killer who strangled three women to death in Lexington, Kentucky. Until August 2006, the killings were thought to be unrelated, but were linked together through DNA testing. Smallwood was arrested the following month, pleaded guilty to each murder, and was sentenced to life imprisonment in October 2007.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sean Patrick Goble</span> American serial killer

Sean Patrick Goble, known as The Interstate Killer, is an American serial killer. A former truck driver, Goble kidnapped and murdered at least four women in the Southern United States between 1994 and 1995. Since his arrest, authorities in ten other states have investigated him for numerous unsolved killings of women. While he was cleared in some of those cases, as of today, his true victim count remains unclear.

Robert Sylvester Alston is an American serial killer who raped and murdered at least four women in Greensboro, North Carolina from 1991 to 1993, whose bodies he then dismembered and buried in various locations. He made anonymous phone calls to investigators about the crimes in an attempt to confuse them and gain media attention. He pleaded guilty to all charges in 1998 and received multiple life terms.

References

  1. "Rocky Mount police chief suspects serial killer in deaths". WRAL. March 31, 2010.
  2. 1 2 3 Kotz, Pete (September 2, 2009). "Antwan Maurice Pittman: Have Police Caught a Serial Killer in Rocky Mount, North Carolina?". True Crime Report.
  3. Erickson, Jon (October 23, 2010). "Human Remains Found In Halifax County". WCTI 12. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
  4. "Victim's mother talks about renewed probe into daughter's death". WRAL-TV. July 1, 2009.
  5. "Funeral held for once-missing Rocky Mount woman". WRAL-TV. March 27, 2010.
  6. "Body of Thorpe found". WRAL-TV. August 17, 2007.
  7. "COINCIDENCE OR VICTIMS OF A SERIAL KILLER? Seven Bridges Rd Killer - Nash/Edge". NC Fighting Crime. October 24, 2020.
  8. "NEW INFO: Human Remains Found In Edgecombe County Woods". WITN. January 11, 2011. Archived from the original on March 18, 2012.
  9. McDonald, Thomasi (January 12, 2011). "Remains found where others discovered". Newsobserver. Archived from the original on October 2, 2012.
  10. "Rocky Mount body identified". WRAL-TV. October 12, 2009.
  11. Mike Hixenbaugh (October 31, 2009). "Smallwood's brother in prison for serial killings". Rocky Mount Telegram . Archived from the original on July 18, 2022. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
  12. "Taraha Nicholson's body found". WRAL-TV. March 7, 2009.
  13. "Sheriff: Remains ID'd as one of missing women". WRAL-TV. January 15, 2011.
  14. "Body of woman identified". WRAL-TV. July 8, 2009.
  15. "Remains identified as Rocky Mount woman". WRAL-TV. April 1, 2010.
  16. "Pittman moved to Raleigh for safety". WRAL-TV. September 3, 2009.
  17. Mike Hixenbaugh (October 7, 2009). "Portrait of a suspected serial killer".
  18. "Warrant links murder suspect to deaths of Rocky Mount women". WRAL-TV. March 15, 2010.
  19. "Pittman found guilty in missing Rocky Mount woman's death". WRAL-TV. September 29, 2011.
  20. Lindell John Kay (October 30, 2016). "Families of serial killer's victims still await justice". Associated Press.
  21. "Motorcyclists ride for Edgecombe Co. murder victims". ABC 11. July 27, 2012.