The Kendall Francois Murders: Revealing America's Unseen VictimsBetween October 1996 and August 1998, Kendall Francois murdered eight women in PoughkeKendall Francois, Poughkeepsie serial killer, true crime, serial murder, sex worker violence, criminal justice reform, forensic psychology, victim advocacy, New York death penalty, body dump case, hoarding disorder, police investigation failure, marginalized victims, missing and murdered women, systemic injustice, criminal profiling, 1990s crime, Hudson Valley murders, social justice true crime, wrongful death investigationepsie, New York, storing their bodies in his family home for nearly two years. This comprehensive examination reveals how systemic failures at every level-law enforcement, social services, media, and society itself-enabled a serial killer to prey on women deemed "less dead" by institutions meant to protect them.Drawing on court documents, forensic evidence, and investigative records, this book traces Francois's development from alienated child to serial murderer while centering the humanity of his victims: women struggling with addiction and poverty whose disappearances failed to trigger adequate investigation. The narrative exposes how a failed polygraph examination, missed investigative opportunities, and the criminalization of sex work created conditions where vulnerable women died preventable deaths.Beyond true crime, this work examines constitutional battles over New York's death penalty, the psychology of hoarding that concealed eight corpses, journalist Claudia Rowe's prison correspondence with Francois, and the families left to fight for their loved ones' dignity against public stigma. The book concludes with urgent calls for criminal justice reform, victim advocacy improvements, and social change to ensure that no population is ever again deemed unworthy of protection.