Fatal Oversight
CONTENT WARNING: This episode contains discussions of sexual violence, murder, and systemic racism in law enforcement. Listener discretion advised. For 25 years, Franklin murdered at least 10 women—possibly dozens more, in the same South Los Angeles neighborhood where he lived. He wasn't careful. He used the same gun. He followed the same pattern. He kept hundreds of photos of his victims in his house. He should have been caught in 1988. He should have been caught again in 2003 when his felony conviction required DNA collection that would have immediately matched him to the murders. But he wasn't caught until 2010, and only because his son's DNA accidentally led police to him. By then, at least three more women were dead, murders that were completely, utterly preventable. This is the story of what happens when victims are deemed "less dead." When Black women from South Central Los Angeles aren't worth the resources required to find their killer. When a serial murderer can operate in plain sight for a quarter century because the system decided some lives simply don't matter enough. The LAPD had an orange Ford Pinto to search for. They had DNA evidence. They had a survivor. They had everything they needed—except the will to act. And 10 women died.
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