FBI posts victim sketches drawn by admitted serial killer; 3 murders said to occur in Arkansas

A file photo of Samuel Little is shown alongside a sketch he drew of a woman he said he killed in West Memphis in 1984. Authorities have connected that confession to a Jane Doe victim and are working to identify her.
A file photo of Samuel Little is shown alongside a sketch he drew of a woman he said he killed in West Memphis in 1984. Authorities have connected that confession to a Jane Doe victim and are working to identify her.

DALLAS — The FBI has released sketches drawn by an admitted serial killer of some of his victims, along with other information on a string of unsolved cold-case homicides to which investigators say the man confessed.

The bureau updated on Tuesday information it had posted in November on its website. The update included drawings made recently by admitted serial killer Samuel Little, based on his memories of some of his victims.

Little said three of his victims were killed in Arkansas: a black female killed in 1992 or 1993 in North Little Rock, a black female killed between 1990 and 1997 in Pine Bluff and a black woman in her late 20s who was killed in 1984 in West Memphis after being picked up in Memphis, Tenn.

Authorities have not located a victim in the purported North Little Rock and Pine Bluff killings. Investigators have matched the West Memphis killing to a Jane Doe victim and are working to identify her. That victim was included in the sketches drawn by Little.

An FBI statement says Little targeted "marginalized and vulnerable women who were often involved in prostitution and addicted to drugs." The bureau hopes the information will generate tips and clues from the public that could help solve the dozens of unsolved homicides.

The FBI says Little, who's 78, is in poor health and is expected to remain in a Texas prison.

The Texas Rangers say Little to date has confessed to 90 homicides nationwide over the past four decades. Ector County District Attorney Bobby Bland in Odessa, Texas, said 50 cold homicide cases have been closed as a result and most of the unsolved homicides remaining are in California

The FBI says Little, whom the bureau said "may be among the most prolific serial killers in U.S. history," has a criminal record dating to 1956. But only recently has he opened up about the long list of killings he has said he committed. Agents who have interviewed Little say he remembers his victims and the killings in great detail, including where he was and what car he was driving. But he could provide little help on dates, creating a challenge that the FBI hopes Little's drawings can help surmount.

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