NEED TO KNOW

In the 1960s, 13 women were killed in the Boston area by a killer dubbed the Boston Strangler

Years later, Albert DeSalvo confessed to the murders, but he was only linked to the final victim with DNA evidence in 2013

As Oxygen re-examines the case on Oct. 26, doubts still remain about the veracity of DeSalvo's confession

Someone was terrorizing the quiet neighborhoods of Boston — single women, quietly getting ready for bed, turning into victims of a nighttime predator who left no easy clues behind.

In the early ‘60s, 13 women were sexually assaulted and strangled, and the city was gripped by fear. The man who confessed to those murders , Albert DeSalvo, became known as the Boston Strangler — but the story didn’t end with his admission. While DNA evidence later linked

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