Chapter
Dean Corll's Potential Victims
The excavation of Dean Corll's potential victims was stopped due to speculation that high-level leaders feared how high the body count would go. Although police declined to pursue possible links between Dean's earliest victims to California, Dean's victims could have been anywhere in Texas, and even a few in California.
Clips
The speaker discusses their ability to have compassion for those who may have caused them pain, as well as the impact that the Hilligies and Glass families had on each other after the crimes of Dean Corll.
1:09:26 - 1:12:18 (02:52)
Summary
The speaker discusses their ability to have compassion for those who may have caused them pain, as well as the impact that the Hilligies and Glass families had on each other after the crimes of Dean Corll.
ChapterDean Corll's Potential Victims
Episode142: Dean Corll: The Diabolical Candyman Who Made Countless Young Boys Disappear
PodcastLights Out
With 28 known victims, Dean Corll and his accomplices committed one of the most heinous serial killing sprees in the 70s.
1:12:18 - 1:13:59 (01:41)
Summary
With 28 known victims, Dean Corll and his accomplices committed one of the most heinous serial killing sprees in the 70s. Many victims went unidentified after the Houston police stopped their excavation of 42 potential sites in 1973.
ChapterDean Corll's Potential Victims
Episode142: Dean Corll: The Diabolical Candyman Who Made Countless Young Boys Disappear
PodcastLights Out
The Houston Mass Murders committed by Dean K. Corll in the early 1970s were halted because officials feared the body count would exceed the existing record of victims, and it is suspected that Corll may have buried some of his earliest victims in California.
1:13:59 - 1:16:37 (02:38)
Summary
The Houston Mass Murders committed by Dean K. Corll in the early 1970s were halted because officials feared the body count would exceed the existing record of victims, and it is suspected that Corll may have buried some of his earliest victims in California.