Boston Strangler
The Boston Strangler was the pseudonym for a serial killer—or potentially multiple killers—responsible for the murders of 13 women in the Greater Boston area between June 14, 1962, and January 4, 1964, most of whom were strangled in their own apartments, often after being sexually assaulted.[1] The victims, ranging in age from 19 to 85, included homemakers, professionals, and retirees, and the crimes sowed widespread panic across the city, prompting residents to avoid being alone at home and leading Boston police to form a special task force in 1963 to investigate the escalating pattern of attacks.[2] The killings were characterized by a lack of forced entry in many cases, with the perpetrator posing as a maintenance worker or deliveryman to gain access, and the bodies often posed in humiliating positions.[3] Albert DeSalvo, a 33-year-old factory worker and Army veteran born in 1931, emerged as the prime suspect after his arrest in November 1964 on unrelated charges of assault and robbery as the "Measuring Man," a serial sex offender who posed as a model agent to assault women in their homes.[4] While undergoing psychiatric evaluation at Bridgewater State Hospital in 1965, DeSalvo confessed to attorney F. Lee Bailey and fellow inmate George Nassar that he had committed all 13 Strangler murders, providing detailed accounts that matched police records, though he claimed no memory of the acts due to blackouts.[2] To avoid the death penalty and secure a life sentence for his client, Bailey arranged for DeSalvo to plead guilty only to the Measuring Man offenses in January 1967, resulting in a life imprisonment term at Walpole State Prison; DeSalvo was never formally charged or tried for the Strangler killings, as prosecutors deemed his confession sufficient for civil commitment but questioned its full veracity.[4] DeSalvo's 1973 stabbing death in prison at age 42, allegedly by inmates seeking revenge for the crimes, fueled ongoing speculation about his guilt, with some experts arguing the murders showed inconsistencies suggesting more than one perpetrator.[5] However, in July 2013, advanced DNA testing by the Massachusetts Attorney General's office matched DeSalvo's genetic profile to semen evidence from the final victim, 19-year-old Mary Sullivan, providing the first forensic link and prompting exhumation of his remains for further analysis on other cases.[6] Despite this confirmation for Sullivan's January 1964 murder, the remaining 12 killings remain officially unsolved, with debates persisting over whether DeSalvo acted alone or if accomplices were involved, as highlighted in books, films, and journalistic investigations like those by reporters Loretta McLaughlin and Jean Cole of the Boston Record American. In October 2025, the Oxygen documentary The Boston Strangler: Unheard Confession released previously unreleased audio tapes of DeSalvo's confession, further fueling speculation about his sole responsibility for the crimes.[7][8]The Crimes
Victim List
The murders attributed to the Boston Strangler spanned from June 1962 to January 1964, primarily targeting single women living alone in the Boston area, with notable clusters in the summer of 1962 (six victims between June and August) and the winter of 1963-1964 (three victims between December 1962 and January 1964). While traditionally linked as 13 murders by the Boston Strangler, some cases exhibit variations in method that have led to debates over single vs. multiple perpetrators. The majority were strangled, often with their own clothing or stockings tied in decorative bows, and most were found in their apartments after the killer gained entry posing as a maintenance worker or similar. The following catalogs the 13 officially linked victims in chronological order, including biographical details, discovery circumstances, and cause of death.[1][9]| Victim Name | Age | Occupation | Residence | Date of Discovery | Circumstances of Discovery and Cause of Death |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anna Slesers | 55 | Seamstress | 77 Gainsborough Street, Back Bay | June 14, 1962 | Discovered by her son on the kitchen floor, legs spread and housecoat ripped open; strangled with the belt of her housecoat tied in a bow around her neck, sexually assaulted.[10][1] |
| Mary Mullen | 85 | Retired | 1435 Commonwealth Avenue, Brighton | June 28, 1962 | Discovered sitting upright on a couch; died of heart attack, possibly from fright (no strangulation evident).[1] |
| Nina Nichols | 68 | Retired nurse | 1940 Commonwealth Avenue, Brighton | June 30, 1962 | Discovered by her sister on the bedroom floor; strangled with a nylon stocking tied around her neck in a bow, sexually assaulted.[1][9] |
| Helen Blake | 65 | Registered nurse | 73 Newhall Street, Lynn | June 30, 1962 | Discovered by a neighbor face-down on the bed; strangled and sexually assaulted, nude with a nylon stocking and bra tied around her neck in a bow.[1][9] |
| Ida Irga | 75 | Retired | 7 Grove Street, Boston | August 19, 1962 | Discovered by her nephew on her back in the bedroom; strangled with a pillowcase tied around her neck, sexually assaulted.[1][9] |
| Jane Sullivan | 67 | Practical nurse | 435 Columbia Road, Dorchester | August 21, 1962 | Discovered by her sister in the bathtub after several days, body partially decomposed; strangled with nylon stockings, no bow noted.[1][9] |
| Sophie Clark | 20 | Student | 315 Huntington Avenue, Back Bay | December 5, 1962 | Discovered by her roommates in the bedroom (converted living room); strangled and sexually assaulted, nude on the bed with a nylon stocking and petticoat tied around her neck.[9][11] |
| Patricia Bissette | 23 | Secretary | 515 Park Drive, Fenway | December 31, 1962 | Discovered by her employer in the bedroom; strangled, semi-nude with nylon stockings and blouse tied around her neck (pregnant at the time).[1][9] |
| Mary Brown | 69 | Unemployed | 319 Park Avenue, Lawrence | March 6, 1963 | Discovered on the floor in the bathroom; strangled, beaten, raped, and stabbed with a fork, partially clothed.[1] |
| Beverly Samans | 23 | Student | 4 University Road, Cambridge | May 6, 1963 | Discovered by friends in the bedroom; stabbed multiple times and strangled, door locked from inside, hands tied, no sexual assault evident.[1] |
| Evelyn Corbin | 58 | Executive secretary | 224 Lafayette Street, Salem | September 8, 1963 | Discovered by her aunt in the bedroom; strangled with two nylon stockings tied in a bow, raped.[1][9] |
| Joann Graff | 23 | Industrial designer | 54 Essex Street, Lawrence | November 23, 1963 | Discovered by two women in the bedroom; strangled, nude with nylon stockings and leotard tied around her neck.[1][9] |
| Mary Sullivan | 19 | Secretary | 44A Charles Street, Beacon Hill | January 4, 1964 | Discovered by her roommate in the bedroom; strangled and sexually assaulted, nude and posed on the bed with semen present, nylon stocking and two scarves tied around her neck in a bow.[1][12][9] |