Morgan Absher
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
But still, come on, you guys.
Yeah, different departments.
It does, yeah.
Yeah.
But you also you had four other women killed and dumped in a field like there's clearly a big issue going on here.
Something's happening.
Something's happening.
And when these multiple murders happen around the same time and place, obviously, police want to know if they're connected.
As you all know, the best way to figure this out is through the forensic evidence, the hard evidence like fingerprints, DNA, ballistics pointing to the same murder weapon.
But when there's none of that, police turn to case linkage analysis, essentially looking at the offender's behaviors, their MO, as we've learned about in past episodes.
Case linkage analysis, though, isn't perfect.
According to a study published in the Journal of Investigative Psychology and Offender Profiling, killers' behavior can change over time for many reasons.
So it's always difficult to say for certain if two murders are connected without that forensic evidence.
But in this case, it was extra complicated.
For one, the bodies appeared in two different states, Teresa in Missouri and Elisa in Illinois.
Which, again, meant that those two departments were going to have to really coordinate and share all of that info that they had to make solving these cases easier or even possible.
And at this point, police were still pretty confident that the first four murders in 2000 were not connected to Teresa or Elisa.
All of the women did have similar profiles in both sets of murders.
Black sex workers in their mid-30s who suffered with substance abuse disorders.
But Elisa and Teresa both worked in Beta, Missouri, not East St.