America's Most Prolific Serial Killer: Samuel LittleFor over forty years, a predator stalked America's most vulnerable women, believing he could kill with impunity because society had already forgotten his victims before he even chose them. Samuel Little systematically targeted sex workers, drug users, and marginalized women whose deaths would be dismissed as "occupational hazards" rather than investigated as murders. By the time he was finally caught, he had become the most prolific serial killer in American history-with at least 93 confessions and 60 confirmed murders spanning decades and crossing state lines.This book follows the parallel stories of Little's victims-like Carol Linda Alford, who dreamed of escape from the streets of Los Angeles, and Audrey Nelson Everett, a bright woman whose life was derailed by domestic violence-and the determined investigators who refused to let their deaths go unanswered. Detective Maria Santos recognized the pattern in the 1980s but lacked the resources to stop him. Decades later, a chance arrest at a homeless shelter and groundbreaking DNA analysis finally provided the evidence needed for justice.This gripping novel reveals how institutional failures enabled one man's reign of terror while celebrating the forensic breakthroughs, relentless investigators, and courageous families who ensured that the forgotten would finally be remembered. It's a story of systematic injustice, scientific triumph, and the unbreakable human spirit that demands accountability-no matter how long justice takes to arrive.