Nine year old Eugene Glenn was described as a mindful and respectful child who was living in the tough North End section of the city of Hartford. He and many of his fellow residents his age would often go exploring in abandoned buildings near where they lived. On August 9th, 1981, his parents reported him missing after he did not return home the night before at 177 Brook Street. He had last been seen in the area of Main and Canton Streets around 5 to 8 pm. After a search of the neighborhood, the boy who was three months away from his birthday was found strangled to death in the basement of an abandoned home at 134 Mather Street hours after he was reported missing. When found he was stripped down from the waist. Police have never stated though if Glen had been sexually abused by his killer. There have been suspects in this case but the murderer has never been brought to justice. A Hartford Courant article at the time noted the similarities of Eugene’s murder and that of several children that were victimized by a possible serial killer(s) in the Atlanta, Georgia area.
Months earlier a person who fled to Hartford from Atlanta and was arrested. The arrested individual had ties to several of the murdered children.
Please see this video for the story https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwXZlzYsde0&list=LL4PqWXRDOn-pposR5EW9pCw&index=427
Wayne Williams would end up being convicted for two of the murders and police would infer that Williams was responsible for most of the other murders. But as time goes by, it looks like that there were others involved.



Tragedy would strike again when Roger “RaRa” Davis Jr. was gunned down on March 6th, 2018 on an early Tuesday morning in the 15000 block of Shanktown Road in the unincorporated community of Reva. He was 27 years old and a former standout athlete in High School. He was related to Punell, because Pullen was the great uncle to two of Davis’s children. There is a $5,000 reward being offered for information in his case that leads to a conviction of the suspect(s).
It was a Friday evening on May 8, 1981, when Tammy Mahoney was picked up while hitchhiking in the city of Oneida, New York near the intersection of Main Street and Fairview Avenue. The nineteen year old had been trying to get a ride to Hamilton, but she was taken to a party on the Oneida Native American Nation’s 32-acre territory located on Route 46. Law Enforcement believes she was sexually assaulted and murdered there by several people. It is believed that those guilty may be members of the Oneida tribe and members of the Onondaga tribe. Mahoney’s remains has never been located but Law Enforcement have stated that they believe they know who killed her and plan to make an arrest when more evidence is found. The reward has been boosted to 40 thousand dollars. The FBI, the Oneida Indian Nation are contributing to the reward for information that leads to a resolution in this case.
The July 6th, 1944 Hartford Ringling Brothers Circus Fire remains the worst tragedy to ever hit the State of Connecticut. A total of 168 people succumbed to the fire and another 682 were injured. Many bodies were burned beyond recognition and several remain unidentified. Now, comes word that two of the five remaining unidentified remains are set to be exhumed to be properly identified. The fire is believed to have been a case of Arson and dramatically changed Fire Code laws in the United States.
It was Thursday, September 12, 1985, when a customer of the Gas & Save Station found employee,
crime.
It’s a mystery that Collier County Sheriffs in Florida have been trying to find out for more than a year. On July 23rd, 2018, a deceased hiker was found in his yellow tent at the Noble’s Campground in the Big Cypress National Preserve in the Everglades. Law Enforcement believe the man had been dead for several days and do not suspect foul play. He was described as a white male between the ages of 35 to 50 years old. When found he was five foot eight and weighed 83 pounds. He had a salt and pepper beard with bluish gray eyes. His teeth were in excellent shape and had been cared for. At the time of his death, he had not been in good health.
After a composite sketch was posted of him online, people remembered meeting him while hiking. He used the hiking names, “Denim” and Mostly Harmless”. He also used the name Ben Bilemy as he signed into several hostels where he stayed along the Appalachian Trail and Florida Trail in Virginia, Georgia and Florida. There were pictures taken of him as well as video, still no one knows his real name or where he was from. There is some belief that he may have worked in the IT industry and had connections to Louisiana and New York State.
It was a horrible crime scene in front of 169 Pavillion Avenue around 12:40 am in South Providence on June 14, 1989. Police got to the scene of a truck that was on fire. Inside in the passenger seat of the cabin was the horribly charred body of an adult female. According to early media reports, the truck had been abandoned for a year and the victim was found to have been shot in the head. One witness reported seeing a white car that drove away from the area at an intense rate of speed. The victims would be identified as 19 year old Dawn Evans who lived at Holly Court. She was the mother of a young son and was taking college courses at Community College of Rhode Island to be a nurse. She also worked at the Subway Sandwich Shop on Tiogue Avenue.