ABC News reports that the FBI said it is now working with the Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Assistance, the Texas Rangers and dozens of other state and local law enforcement agencies “to match Little’s confessions with evidence from women who turned up dead in states from California to Florida between 1970 and 2005.”
Little is in poor health and will likely die in prison, the FBI said, so investigators are racing to identify as many of his victims as possible and help close these unsolved cases.
Little, who was once a competitive boxer, often knocked out his victims and then strangled them, sometimes leaving no clear signs of a homicide, according to the FBI. Many of the deaths were attributed to natural causes, overdoses or accidents, officials said.
One of Little’s confessions involves the fatal shooting of a woman in Richland County, South Carolina, more than 40 years ago, the AP reported.
Evelyn Weston, 19, was shot in the head in September 1978, and sheriff Leon Lott of the Richland County Sheriff’s Department examined her body at the time.
Forty years later, Lott is still on the force and got the call from officials in Texas that Little had confessed to shooting a woman in the head there, the AP reported.