

The murderer was never found, even though the story received significant media attention. Last seen alive on May 17, 1953, in Isojoki, Finland, Kyllikki Saari was riding her bike home from a prayer meeting when she was apparently attacked. 5 | Kyllikki Saari Murder Kyllikki Saari (back right) with sisters As of October 2020, the case is still unsolved. In June 2020, a German prosecutor Hans Christian Wolters says he has evidence Madeleine is dead – but he gives no details. This was initially deemed an abduction until an incorrect DNA test indicated that the girl died in the hotel room, and the Portuguese investigators claimed that the McCanns hid Madeleine’s body and they simulated an abduction. On May 3, 2007, 3-year-old Madeline McCann disappeared from her family’s rented holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, Portugal, while her parents dined at a tapas bar – 120 metres away. 4 | The Disappearance Of Madeleine McCann Madeleine McCann He remains the only suspect, and has never been found. The media named the crime “The Icebox Murders,” and Rogers was declared dead in absentia in July 1975. The two prime suspects in the case have since died, and the case remains unsolved to this day.ģ | The Houston Ice Box Killer The Houston Ice Box Murder VictimsĬharles Rogers disappeared in June 1965 after police discovered the dismembered bodies of his elderly parents in the refrigerator of the Houston home they shared. The murders are remembered for their particular viciousness and the lack of motive behind them. Tina’s body was found three years later, miles away from the murder scene. Along with the three murders, the younger Sharp daughter, Tina (12) was reported missing. Whoever attacked them bound them with medical tape. In 1981 in Cabin 28 of the Keddie Resort, California, three members of the Sharp family, as well as one of their family friends, were bludgeoned to death with hammers, with one repeatedly stabbed. 2 | The Keddie Murders Keddie Resort Murder The report cast doubt on the government’s conclusion that Ivins was the perpetrator, finding that the type of anthrax used in the letters was correctly identified as the Ames strain of the bacterium, but that there was insufficient scientific evidence for the FBI’s assertion that it originated from Ivins’s laboratory. In 2008, the FBI requested a review of the scientific methods used in their investigation from the National Academy of Sciences, which released their findings in the report in 2011. The FBI formally closed its investigation on February 19, 2010. Federal prosecutors declared Ivins the sole culprit on August 6, 2008, based on DNA evidence leading to an anthrax vial in his lab. On July 29, 2008, Ivins died by suicide with an overdose of acetaminophen.
