Fatal Oversight
He was a "nobody." Short, overweight, walking with a cane. No one would suspect mild-mannered Ronald Dominique of murder. That's exactly how he killed 23 men over nine years—and almost got away with it. From 1997 to 2006, bodies appeared across southern Louisiana. Dumped in bayous. Left in sugarcane fields. Strangled, bound, tortured. All of them men. Most of them Black. Many of them homeless or gay. And for nearly a decade, nobody connected the dots. Ronald Dominique had already been arrested for rape in 1996, but the case never went to trial because police couldn't find the survivor. So Dominique learned his lesson: don't leave witnesses. He started killing every victim to avoid going back to jail. Twenty-three murders later, he was still walking free. This is the story of how poverty, homophobia, and indifference created the perfect conditions for Louisiana's most prolific serial killer. How police in multiple parishes failed to recognize a pattern even as bodies piled up. How Hurricane Katrina and chronic underfunding stretched law enforcement so thin that a serial killer operated with impunity. CONTENT WARNING: This episode contains discussions of sexual violence, murder, homophobia, and systemic failures in law enforcement. Listener discretion advised.
6 jaksot
Kommentit
0Ole ensimmäinen kommentoija
Rekisteröidy nyt ja liity Fatal Oversight-yhteisöön!