Main South Woodsman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Victims3–5
Spanof crimes
2002  2004
(possibly until 2007)
CountryUnited States
Main South Woodsman
Details
Victims3–5
Span of crimes
2002  2004
(possibly until 2007)
CountryUnited States
StateMassachusetts

The Main South Woodsman is an unidentified serial killer who murdered between three and five prostitutes in Worcester, Massachusetts, from 2002 to 2007. His nickname derives from the Main South neighborhood, where he picked up most of his victims.

The prime suspect in the murders, Alex Scesny, was identified in 2008, due to the fact he had a history of sexual abuse and was suspected in the murder of a sex worker. Although convicted of the aforementioned offenses, he has never been charged in the Main South Woodsman cases, all of which remain unsolved.

Suspected victims

All of the Woodsman's known victims were Hispanic women with slim builds, short statures, dark hair color and aged between 29 and 42 at the time of their deaths.[1] Each of them engaged in prostitution in some way, and suffered from drug addiction.

  • The killer's first confirmed victim was 29-year-old Carmen Rudy, who went missing from Worcester on September 30, 2002. She had two children. [2] Rudy suffered from a drug addiction for which she underwent treatment at the Linda Fay Griffin House, a substance abuse treatment facility. Her skeletonized remains were discovered almost a year after her disappearance on September 29, 2003, on the campus of the Hillside High School in Marlborough.[1]
  • A few dozen meters away from where Rudy's remains were discovered, authorities also located the skeletal remains of 29-year-old Betzaida Montalvo (also known as Maritele Burgos), who had gone missing in April 2003.[3] She was a mother of three children who had a history of prostituting herself, as well as having a drug addiction and a criminal record for possessing drugs. She had been released from a jail in Framingham in December 2002.[4] Initially, Montalvo's identity could not be established due to the severe decomposition of her body, due to which she was named "Jane Doe No. 1" in the criminal case.[4] In October 2003, forensic scientists reconstructed her skull and then distributed a digital rendition of what her face supposedly looked like, in addition to releasing information about her clothing and jewelry. When this failed to generate leads, her remains were sent to a Smithsonian Institution in the District of Columbia in December 2003, where a comparison of photos and the forensic sketch led to the tentative identification of Montalvo as the decedent.[4] She was conclusively identified in April 2004, after her relatives provided a DNA sample that was matched to the remains. During the investigation, police located a witness, 59-year-old Worcester resident Joseph Parson, who claimed that he knew Carmen Rudy and that he had seen her in the company of Montalvo.[5]
  • On March 3, 2004, the body of 33-year-old Dinelia Torres, missing since the fall of 2003, was found in a wooded area near Hudson, approximately two kilometers away from where the previous victims' remains had been found.[3] Like Rudy and Montalvo, she had a history of prostitution and drug abuse.[6] As a teenager, Torres gave birth to a child and dropped out of school, and after the baby's father left her, she developed a drug addiction.[2] She was prosecuted for car theft in 1994, and eventually signed over guardianship of her three children over to her parents.[6] In the early 2000s, Torres was treated in the same treatment facility as Rudy, but there is no evidence to indicate that the two women knew each other.[4]
  • In the early morning hours of September 5, 2004, 42-year-old Wendy A. Morrello was at home with a friend of hers when she suddenly ran out of the front door and disappeared.[7] According to her friend, she had not slept for several days due to her heavy intake of drugs and hallucinations. Eight days later, her body was found in York, Maine, and she was identified via her tattoos. Strangely, she was found fully clothed and her jewelry had not been stolen.[8] Like the other victims, Morello had a history of prostitution and drug abuse, having been convicted of drug possession in 1995.[9] She had two children, but spent the last years of her life being repeatedly incarcerated, living on the streets or with acquaintances. Her cause of death was not revealed, as the police claimed that it would compromise their investigation and any possible connection she might have had with the other victims.[9]
  • On September 4, 2007, the remains of 35-year-old Lineida Oliveira were found in the woods near Rutland. A mother of eleven children, she went missing in January of that year, two weeks after giving birth to twin girls. Relatives filed a missing persons report in May, claiming that Oliveira was homeless and had chronic drug problems dating back to 1997. According to her family, she arrived on the mainland from Puerto Rico in 1988, and by 1999 had six children, who were then taken away by CPS due to her lifestyle.[10] During the investigation, investigators were inclined to believe that the killer was a person known to the victim, because according to her sister Marilyn, before going on a date with a young man, Oliveira would leave his details and cell phone number in case it was a stranger, but this time did not.[10] This led them to believe that the last person to see her alive, who likely killed her, was probably personally acquainted with her.[10]

Investigation

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI