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Dean Corll
Dean Corll
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Dean Arnold Corll (December 24, 1939 – August 8, 1973) was an American serial killer and sex offender who abducted, raped, tortured and murdered a minimum of twenty-nine teenage boys and young men between 1970 and 1973 in Houston and Pasadena, Texas. He was aided by two teenaged accomplices, David Owen Brooks and Elmer Wayne Henley. The crimes, which became known as the Houston Mass Murders, came to light after Henley fatally shot Corll. Upon discovery, the case was considered the worst example of serial murder in United States history.[4]

Key Information

Corll's victims were typically lured with an offer of a party or a lift to one of the various addresses at which he resided between 1970 and 1973. They would then be restrained either by force or deception, and each was killed either by strangulation or shooting with a .22 caliber pistol. Corll and his accomplices buried eighteen of their victims in a rented boat shed; four other victims were buried in woodland near Lake Sam Rayburn, one victim was buried on a beach in Jefferson County, and at least six victims were buried on a beach on the Bolivar Peninsula. Brooks and Henley confessed to assisting Corll in several abductions and murders; both were sentenced to life imprisonment.

Corll was also known as the Candy Man and the Pied Piper, because he and his family had previously owned and operated a candy factory in Houston Heights, and he had been known to give free candy to local children.[5]

Early life

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Childhood

[edit]

Dean Arnold Corll was born on December 24, 1939, in Fort Wayne, Indiana, the first child of Mary Emma Robison (1916–2010) and Arnold Edwin Corll (1916–2001).[6] Corll's father was strict with his children, whereas his mother was markedly protective of both her sons. Their marriage was marred by frequent quarreling and the couple divorced in 1946, four years after the birth of their younger son, Stanley Wayne.[7] Mary subsequently sold the family home and relocated to a trailer home in Memphis, Tennessee, where Arnold had been drafted into the United States Air Force after their divorce, to allow her sons to remain in contact with their father.[8]

Corll was a shy, serious child who rarely socialized with other children, but at the same time displayed concern for the wellbeing of others.[8] He was also markedly sensitive to any form of criticism or rejection.[9] At the age of seven, he suffered an undiagnosed case of rheumatic fever, which was not recognized until doctors found Corll had a heart murmur in 1950. As a result of this diagnosis, Corll was told to avoid P.E. classes in school.[8]

Corll's parents attempted reconciliation and remarried in 1950, subsequently moving to Pasadena, Texas, a suburb of Houston; however, the reconciliation was short lived and, in 1953, the couple once again divorced, with the mother again retaining custody of her two sons and briefly residing in a trailer home upon a rural farm while supporting her children via menial employment. The divorce was granted on amicable grounds and both boys maintained regular contact with their father.[8]

Following the second divorce, Corll's mother married a traveling clock salesman named Jake John West. The family moved to the small town of Vidor, Texas, where Corll's half-sister, Joyce Jeanine (1955–2016), was born.[10][11] Corll's mother and stepfather started a small family candy company, initially operating from the garage of their home.[n 1] From the earliest days of the business, Corll worked day and night while still attending school.[13] He and his younger brother were responsible for operating the candy-making machines and packing the product, which his stepfather sold on his sales route. This route often involved West traveling to Houston, where much of the product was sold.[14]

From 1954 to 1958, Corll attended Vidor High School, where he was regarded as a well-behaved student who achieved satisfactory grades. As had been the case in his childhood, Corll was also considered somewhat of a loner, although he is known to have occasionally dated girls in his teenage years.[15] In high school, Corll's only major interest was the brass band, in which he played trombone.[16]

Corll, pictured with his half-sister, Joyce West, c. 1960

Move to Houston Heights

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Corll graduated from Vidor High School in the summer of 1958. Shortly thereafter, he and his family moved to the northern outskirts of Houston so that the family candy business could be closer to the city where the majority of their product was sold. Corll's family opened a new shop, which they named Pecan Prince in reference to the brand name of the family product.[17] In 1960, at the request of his mother, Corll moved to Yoder, Indiana, to live with his widowed grandmother.[18][19] During this time, Corll formed a close relationship with a local girl, although he rejected a subsequent marriage proposal she made to him in 1962. Corll lived in Indiana for almost two years but returned to Houston in 1962 to help with his family's candy business, which by this date had moved to Houston Heights. He later moved into an apartment of his own above the shop.[16]

Corll's mother divorced West in 1963 and opened a new candy business, which she named Corll Candy Company; her eldest son was appointed vice president of the new family firm,[19] with his younger brother Stanley being appointed secretary-treasurer.[20] The same year, one of the teenaged male employees of Corll Candy Company complained to Corll's mother that her son had made sexual advances towards him.[21] In response, she fired the teenager.[22]

U.S. Army service

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Corll was drafted into the United States Army on August 10, 1964,[7] and assigned to Fort Polk, Louisiana, for basic training.[23] He was later assigned to Fort Benning, Georgia, to train as a radio repairman before his permanent assignment to Fort Hood, Texas. According to official military records, Corll's period of service in the army was unblemished.[15] Corll, however, reportedly hated military service; he applied for a hardship discharge on the grounds that he was needed in his family's business.[19][24] The army granted his request and he was given an honorable discharge on June 11, 1965, after ten months of service.[15]

Corll, aged 24, shortly after entering the US Army in August 1964

Reportedly, Corll divulged to some of his close acquaintances after his release from the army that it was during his military service that he had first realized that he was homosexual and had experienced his first homosexual encounters. Other acquaintances noted subtle changes in Corll's mannerisms when in the company of teenage males after he had completed his service and returned to Houston, which led them to believe he may have been homosexual.[25]

Corll Candy Company

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Following his honorable discharge from the army, Corll returned to Houston Heights and resumed the position he had held as vice-president of Corll Candy Company.[18] Corll's former stepfather had retained ownership of the family's former candy business, Pecan Prince, following his divorce from Corll's mother in 1963; competition between the two firms was fierce. As had been the case in his teenage years, Corll increased the number of hours he devoted to the candy business to satisfy an increasing public demand for his family's product.[26]

In 1965,[23] Corll Candy Company relocated to a bungalow on West 22nd Street, directly across the street from Helms Elementary School.[27][n 2] Corll was known to give free candy to local children,[29] in particular teenage boys. As a result of this behavior, he earned himself the nicknames of the "Candy Man" and the "Pied Piper." The company employed a small workforce, and he was seen to behave flirtatiously toward several teenage male employees.[8] Corll is also known to have installed a pool table at the rear of the candy factory where employees and local youths would congregate—typically in the evening—to listen to music and play pool or penny ante.[30]

Relationship with David Brooks

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In 1967, Corll befriended 12-year-old David Owen Brooks,[31] then a sixth grade student and one of the many children to whom he gave free candy. Brooks initially became one of Corll's many youthful companions, regularly socializing with Corll and various teenage boys who congregated at the rear of the candy factory. He also joined Corll on the regular trips he took to South Texas beaches in the company of various youths, and later commented that Corll was the first adult male who did not mock his appearance.[8] Whenever Brooks told Corll he needed cash, Corll gave him money, and the youth began to view Corll as a father figure.[30] Upon Corll's urging, a sexual relationship gradually developed between the two. Beginning in 1969,[32] Corll paid Brooks in cash or with gifts to allow him to perform fellatio on the youth.[33]

Brooks's parents were divorced; his father lived in Houston and his mother had relocated to Beaumont, a city 85 miles (140 km) east of Houston. In 1970, when he was 15, Brooks dropped out of Waltrip High School[30] and moved to Beaumont to live with his mother. Whenever he visited his father in Houston, he also visited Corll, who allowed him to stay at his apartment if he wished. Later the same year, Brooks moved back to Houston. By his own later admission, Brooks began regarding Corll's apartment as his second home.[34]

By the time Brooks dropped out of high school, Corll's mother and his half-sister, Joyce, had relocated to Manitou Springs, Colorado, after the failure of her third marriage and the closure of Corll Candy Company in June 1968.[35] Corll's mother would open a new candy firm in Colorado, although Corll opted to remain in Houston.[36] Although she often talked to her eldest son on the telephone, his mother never saw him again.[22]

Shortly before the closure of the candy company, Corll took a job as an electrician at the Houston Lighting and Power Company (HL&P) while simultaneously working for the family firm.[37] In this employment, he tested electrical relay systems, and would later rise to the rank of supervisor.[16][38] Corll worked in this employment until the day of his death.[20][39]

Murders

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Between 1970 and 1973, Corll is known to have killed a minimum of twenty-nine victims. All of his victims were males aged 13 to 20, the majority of whom were in their mid-teens. Most victims were abducted from Houston Heights, which was then a low-income neighborhood northwest of downtown Houston. In most of these abductions, he was assisted by one or both of his teenage accomplices: David Owen Brooks and Elmer Wayne Henley. Several victims were friends of one or both of Corll's accomplices; others were either hitchhikers or individuals with whom Corll had himself become acquainted prior to their abduction and murder,[40][41] and two other victims, Billy Gene Baulch Jr. and Gregory Malley Winkle, were former employees of Corll Candy Company.[42]

One of two marine-grade plywood torture boards constructed by Corll

Corll's victims were usually lured into either one of the two vehicles he owned (a Ford Econoline van and a Plymouth GTX)[30] or a 1969 Chevrolet Corvette[43] he is known to have purchased for Brooks in February 1971. The enticement was typically an offer of a party or a lift, and the victim would be driven to Corll's house.[44] At Corll's residence, the youths would be plied with alcohol or other drugs until they passed out, tricked into donning handcuffs,[45] or simply grabbed by force.[46] They were then stripped naked and tied to either Corll's bed or, usually, a marine-grade plywood torture board which was regularly hung on a wall.[47] Once manacled, the victims would be sexually assaulted, beaten, tortured and, sometimes after several days, killed by strangulation or shooting with a .22 caliber pistol. Their bodies were then tied in plastic sheeting[48] and buried in one of four places: a rented boat shed in Southwest Houston,[49] a beach on the Bolivar Peninsula, a woodland near Lake Sam Rayburn (where Corll's family owned a lakeside log cabin), or a beach in Jefferson County.[7]

In several instances, Corll forced his victims to either phone or write to their parents with explanations for their absences in an effort to allay the parents' fears for their sons' safety.[50] He is also known to have retained keepsakes—usually keys—from his victims.[51][n 3]

During the years in which he abducted and murdered his victims, Corll often changed addresses—sometimes residing in an apartment for a matter of weeks before relocating.[1] However, until he moved into his father's former home in Pasadena in the spring of 1973, he always lived in or close to Houston Heights—frequently close to elementary schools.[53][54]

First known murders

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Jeffrey Alan Konen

Corll killed his first known victim, an 18-year-old college freshman named Jeffrey Konen, on September 25, 1970.[55] Konen vanished while hitchhiking with another student from the University of Texas to his parents' home in Houston.[56] He and his hitchhiking companion were picked up by a fellow student near Bergstrom Air Force Base at 3:30 p.m.;[57] he was dropped off alone at the corner of Westheimer Road and South Voss Road near the Uptown area of Houston at approximately 6:30 p.m.[58][59][60] Corll likely offered Konen a lift to his home, which Konen evidently accepted. At the time of Konen's disappearance, Corll lived in the Harold Turboff apartments, where he had paid a deposit of a month's rent on September 21.[61]

Brooks led police to Konen's body on August 10, 1973. The body was buried at High Island Beach. Forensic scientists subsequently deduced that the youth had died of asphyxiation caused by manual strangulation and a cloth gag that had been placed in his mouth.[62] The nude body was found buried beneath a section of broken cement,[63] covered with a layer of lime, wrapped in plastic, and bound hand and foot with nylon cord, suggesting he had been violated.[64]

Shortly after Konen's murder, Brooks interrupted Corll in the act of sexually assaulting two teenage boys whom Corll had strapped to a four-poster bed.[65][66] Corll promised Brooks a car in return for his silence; Brooks accepted the offer and Corll later bought him a green Chevrolet Corvette. Corll later told Brooks that he had killed the two youths, and offered him $200 (the equivalent of approximately $1,620 as of 2025) for any boy he could lure to Corll's apartment.[7]

On December 13, 1970, Brooks lured two 14-year-old Spring Branch youths named James Glass and Danny Yates away from a religious rally held in Houston Heights to an apartment Corll had recently rented at 3300 Yorktown.[67][30] Glass was an acquaintance of Brooks who, at Brooks's behest, had previously visited Corll's address. Both youths were restrained to Corll's four-poster bed with rope and handcuffs and subsequently raped, strangled, and buried in a boat shed he had rented on November 17.[68][69] An electrical cord with alligator clips attached to each end was buried alongside Yates's body.[70]

Six weeks after the double murder of Glass and Yates, on January 30, 1971, Brooks and Corll encountered two teenage brothers, Donald and Jerry Waldrop, walking toward their parents' home.[30] The Waldrop brothers had been driven to a friend's home by their father with plans to discuss forming a bowling league and had begun walking home after learning their friend was not at home.[71] Both boys were enticed into Corll's van and driven to an apartment Corll had rented on Mangum Road, where they were raped, strangled and subsequently buried in the boat shed.[72]

Between March and May 1971, Corll abducted and killed three victims, all of whom lived in Houston Heights and all of whom were buried toward the rear of the boat shed.[73] In each of these abductions, Brooks is known to have been a participant. One of these three victims, 15-year-old Randell Harvey, was last seen by his family on the afternoon of March 9 cycling towards Oak Forest,[74] where he worked part-time as a gas station attendant. Harvey was driven to Corll's Mangum Road apartment, where he was subsequently killed by a single gunshot to the head.[74] The other two victims, 13-year-old David Hilligiest and 16-year-old Gregory Malley Winkle, were abducted and killed together on the afternoon of May 29; both were murdered at an apartment Corll rented on West 11th Street.[75][76]

Selma Winkle, pictured holding a reward poster she and the parents of David Hilligiest distributed following the disappearance of their sons

As had been the case with parents of other victims of Corll, both sets of parents launched a frantic search for their sons. One of the youths who voluntarily offered to distribute posters the parents had printed offering a monetary reward for information leading to the boys' whereabouts was 15-year-old Elmer Wayne Henley—a lifelong friend of Hilligiest. The youth pinned the reward posters around the Heights and attempted to reassure Hilligiest's parents that there might be an innocent explanation for the boys' absence.[77]

On July 1, 1971, a 17-year-old named Donald Falcon disappeared from the streets near his parents' West University Place apartment complex.[78] Sections of his body were later recovered from the boat shed.[79][n 4] Seven weeks later, on August 17, Corll and Brooks encountered a 17-year-old acquaintance of Brooks named Ruben Watson Haney walking home from a movie theater in Houston. Brooks persuaded Haney to attend a party at an address Corll had moved to on San Felipe Street the previous month.[81] Haney agreed and was taken to Corll's home where he was subsequently strangled and buried in the boat shed.[82]

In September 1971, Corll moved to an apartment on Columbia Street. This address was also located in the Heights. Brooks later stated he had assisted Corll in the abduction and murder of two youths during the time Corll resided at this address, including one youth who was killed "just before Wayne Henley came into the picture." In his confession, Brooks stated the youth killed immediately prior to Henley's involvement in the murders was abducted from the Heights and kept alive for approximately four days before his murder.[81] The identities of both of these victims remain unknown.[83]

Participation of Elmer Wayne Henley

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In approximately October 1971, Brooks encountered Wayne Henley as the two truanted from Hamilton Junior High School; he later introduced him to Corll.[84] Henley likely was lured to Corll's address as an intended victim.[39] However, Corll evidently decided the youth would make a good accomplice[39] and offered him the same fee of $200 for any boy he could lure to his apartment,[85] informing Henley that he was involved in a "white slavery ring" operating from Dallas.[86][87]

Henley later stated that, for several months, he ignored Corll's offer, although he did maintain an acquaintance with Corll and gradually began to view him as something of a "brother-type person" whose work ethic he admired and in whom he could confide.[88][89] In early 1972, he decided to accept Corll's offer because he and his family were in dire financial circumstances. Henley said the first abduction he participated in occurred during the time Corll resided at 925 Schuler Street, an address he moved to on February 19. (Brooks later claimed that Henley became involved in the abductions while Corll resided at the address he had occupied immediately prior to Schuler Street.) If Henley's statement is to be believed, the victim was abducted from the Heights in February or early March 1972. In the statement Henley gave to police following his arrest, the youth stated he and Corll picked up "a boy" at the corner of 11th and Studewood,[90] and lured him to Corll's home on the promise of smoking some marijuana with the pair. At Corll's residence—using a ruse he and Corll had prepared—Henley cuffed his own hands behind his back, freed himself with a key hidden in his back pocket, then duped the youth into donning the handcuffs before observing Corll bind and gag him. Henley then left the youth alone with Corll, believing he was to be sold into the slavery ring as a houseboy.[91] The identity of this first victim Henley assisted in the abduction of remains unknown.[92]

One month later, on March 24, 1972,[93] Henley, Brooks, and Corll encountered an 18-year-old acquaintance of Henley's named Frank Aguirre leaving a restaurant on Yale Street, where the youth worked.[94] Henley called Aguirre over to Corll's van and invited the youth to drink beer and smoke marijuana with the trio at Corll's apartment. Aguirre agreed and followed the trio to Corll's home in his Rambler. Inside Corll's house, Aguirre smoked marijuana with the trio before picking up a pair of handcuffs Corll had left on his table. In response, Corll pounced on Aguirre, pushed him onto the table, and cuffed his hands behind his back.[95]

Henley later claimed that he had not known of Corll's true intentions towards Aguirre when he had persuaded his friend to accompany him to Corll's home. In a 2010 interview, he claimed to have attempted to persuade Corll not to assault and kill Aguirre once Corll and Brooks had bound and gagged the youth.[30] However, Corll refused, informing Henley that he had raped, tortured, and killed the previous victim he had assisted in abducting, and that he intended to do the same with Aguirre.[86] Henley subsequently assisted Corll and Brooks in Aguirre's burial at High Island Beach.[30]

Despite the revelations that Corll was, in reality, killing the boys that he and Brooks had assisted in abducting, Henley nonetheless became an active participant in the abductions and murders. One month later, on April 20, he assisted Corll and Brooks in the abduction of another youth, 17-year-old Mark Scott.[96] Scott—who was well known to Corll, Henley and Brooks—was specifically chosen by Corll to be his next victim as, according to Henley, he had recently "cheated [Corll] on a deal" relating to stolen property. He was grabbed by force and fought furiously against attempts by Corll to restrain him, even attempting to stab Corll with a knife after several hours of abuse and torture including burning with incense cones.[97] However, Scott saw Henley pointing a pistol toward him and according to Brooks, Scott "just gave up." All three then alternately shot Scott with a pellet gun before Corll again raped him.[98] Scott ultimately suffered the same fate as Aguirre: rape, torture, strangulation, and burial at High Island Beach.[92][n 5]

Brooks later stated Henley was "especially sadistic" in his participation in the murders committed at Schuler Street and Henley later admitted to gradually becoming "fascinated" with "how much stamina people have" when subjected to the act of murder, adding that, as a coping mechanism, he occasionally "tried to dehumanize" the victims.[100][101] Before Corll vacated the address on June 26, Henley assisted Corll and Brooks in the abduction and murder of two youths named Billy Baulch and Johnny Delome.[102] According to Henley, on this occasion, he was invited to Corll's apartment where he observed the two socializing with Corll and Brooks; he then assisted in subduing the pair.[102] In Brooks's confession, he stated that both youths were tied to Corll's bed and, after their torture and rape, Henley manually strangled Baulch, with the process lasting almost thirty minutes.[103] Henley then shouted, "Hey, Johnny!" and shot Delome in the forehead, with the bullet exiting through the youth's ear. Delome then pleaded with Henley, "Wayne, please don't!" before he was strangled. Both youths were buried at High Island Beach.[104]

During the time Corll resided at Schuler Street, the trio lured a 19-year-old named William Ridinger to the house. Ridinger was initially tied to hooks drilled upon the wall of the property and, later, the plywood board, where he was tortured and abused by Corll over the course of approximately three days.[105] Brooks later claimed he persuaded Corll to allow Ridinger to be released, and the youth was allowed to leave the residence. On another occasion during the time Corll resided at Schuler Street, Henley knocked Brooks unconscious as he entered the house. Corll then tied Brooks to the plywood board and assaulted the youth repeatedly before releasing him.[106] Despite the assault, Brooks continued to assist Corll in the abductions of the victims.[65]

After vacating the Schuler Street residence, Corll moved to an apartment at Westcott Towers, where, in the summer of 1972, he is known to have killed a further two victims. The first of these victims, 17-year-old Steven Sickman, was last seen leaving a party held near to the Heights shortly before midnight on July 19.[107] The youth was savagely bludgeoned about the chest with a blunt instrument before he was strangled and buried in the boat shed.[108] Approximately one month later, on or about August 21, 19-year-old Roy Bunton was abducted while walking to his job as an assistant manager in a Northwest Mall shoe store.[109][110] Bunton was gagged with a section of Turkish towel and his mouth bound with adhesive tape. He was shot twice in the head and buried in the boat shed.[111] Neither youth was named by either Brooks or Henley as being a victim of Corll, and both youths were identified as victims only in 2011.[112]

On October 3, 1972, Henley and Brooks encountered two Heights teenagers, Wally Jay Simoneaux and Richard Hembree, walking to Hembree's home.[113] Simoneaux and Hembree were enticed into Brooks's Corvette and driven to Corll's Westcott Towers apartment. That evening, Simoneaux is known to have phoned his mother's home and to have shouted the word "Mama" into the receiver before the connection was terminated.[114] The following morning, Hembree was accidentally shot in the mouth by Henley,[115] with the bullet exiting through his neck. Several hours later, both youths were strangled to death and subsequently buried in a common grave inside the boat shed directly above the bodies of James Glass and Danny Yates.[73] Sometime in November 1972, 18-year-old Willard Branch, an Oak Forest youth known to both Corll and Henley, disappeared while hitchhiking from Mount Pleasant to Houston.[116][n 6] His gagged and emasculated body was buried in the boat shed.[118] On November 11, a 19-year-old Spring Branch youth named Richard Kepner disappeared on his way to a phone booth. Kepner was strangled and buried at High Island Beach. Altogether, at least ten teenagers between the ages of 13 and 19 were murdered between March and November 1972, five of whom were buried at High Island Beach, and five inside the boat shed.[119]

On January 20, 1973, Corll moved to an address on Wirt Road in the Spring Branch district of Houston. Within two weeks of moving into this address, he had killed 17-year-old Joseph Lyles. Lyles was known to both Corll and Brooks. He had lived on Antoine Drive—the same street upon which Brooks resided in early 1973—and is known to have visited Corll's apartment to purchase marijuana on at least one occasion prior to his disappearance.[120][121] On March 1, Corll vacated his Wirt Road apartment; he briefly resided in an apartment on South Post Oak Road before moving to 2020 Lamar Drive, an address his father had vacated in Pasadena after residing in the property for twenty-two years.[122][n 7]

2020 Lamar Drive

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No known victims were killed between February 3 and June 4, 1973. Corll is known to have suffered from a hydrocele in early 1973, which may have contributed to this period of inactivity.[124] In addition, around the time of Lyles's murder, Henley spontaneously traveled to Florida with a long-haul truck driver uncle before temporarily relocating to Mount Pleasant in an apparent effort to distance himself from Corll.[n 8] These facts may account for this sudden lull in killings.[126]

Nonetheless, from June, Corll's rate of killings increased dramatically, and both Henley and Brooks later testified to the increase in the level of brutality of the murders committed while Corll resided at Lamar Drive. Henley later compared Corll's escalation to being "like a blood lust",[127] adding that he and Brooks would instinctively know when Corll was to announce that he "needed to do a new boy," due to the fact that he would appear restless, smoking cigarettes and making reflex movements.[30]

The Corll family lakeside log cabin at Lake Sam Rayburn. Four victims killed by Corll and his accomplices in 1973 were buried in woodland at this location.

On June 4, Corll and Henley abducted 15-year-old William Ray Lawrence; the youth was last seen alive by his father on 31st Street.[128] After three days of abuse and torture, Lawrence was strangled before being buried at Lake Sam Rayburn.[n 9] Less than two weeks later, 20-year-old Raymond Stanley Blackburn was abducted, strangled, and buried at Lake Sam Rayburn.[82] On July 6, 1973, Henley began attending classes at the Coaches Driving School in Bellaire,[130] where he became acquainted with 15-year-old Homer Louis Garcia.[131] The following day, Garcia telephoned his mother to say he was spending the night with a friend; he was shot and left to bleed to death in Corll's bathtub before he was buried at Lake Sam Rayburn.[132][133] Five days later, on July 12, 17-year-old John Sellars of Orange County was bound, shot to death and buried at High Island Beach.[134]

In July 1973, after Brooks married his pregnant fiancée,[30] Henley temporarily became Corll's sole procurer of victims, assisting in the abduction and murder of three Heights youths between July 19 and 25. Henley claimed these three abductions were the only three that occurred after his becoming an accomplice to Corll in which Brooks was not a participant.[135] One of these three victims, 15-year-old Michael Baulch, brother of previous victim Billy Baulch, was last seen by his family on July 19 on his way to get a haircut;[136] he was strangled and buried at Lake Sam Rayburn. The other two victims, Charles Cobble and Marty Ray Jones, were abducted together on the afternoon of July 25. Henley himself later buried both youths' bodies in the boat shed.[137]

On August 3, 1973, Corll killed his last victim, a 13-year-old boy from South Houston named James Stanton Dreymala. Dreymala was abducted by Corll while riding his bike in Pasadena and driven to Lamar Drive upon the pretense of collecting empty glass bottles to resell.[138][139] At Corll's home, Dreymala called his parents to tell them he was at "a party" across town before he was tied to Corll's torture board, raped, tortured, and strangled with a cord before being buried in the boat shed. Brooks later described Dreymala as a "small, blond boy" for whom he had bought a pizza and in whose company he had spent forty-five minutes at Corll's home before the youth was attacked.[122]

August 8, 1973

[edit]

On the evening of August 7, 1973, Henley invited 20-year-old Timothy Cordell Kerley to attend a party at Corll's Pasadena residence.[140] Kerley—a casual acquaintance of Corll who was intended to be his next victim—accepted the offer.[141] Brooks was not present at the time.[142] The two youths arrived at Corll's house, where they sniffed paint fumes and drank alcohol until midnight before leaving the house, promising to return shortly. Henley and Kerley then drove back to Houston Heights and Kerley parked his vehicle close to Henley's home. The two exited the vehicle and Henley, hearing commotion across the street emanating from the home of his 15-year-old friend Rhonda Louise Williams, walked toward her home.[143] Williams—nursing a sprained ankle—had been beaten by her drunken father that evening and, having resolved to run away from home, had packed several basic belongings into an overnight bag before seeking temporary refuge in a washateria close to her home, where Henley encountered her.[144] Williams accepted Henley's invitation to join him and Kerley at Corll's home and climbed into the back seat of Kerley's Volkswagen.[143][7] The trio then drove toward Corll's Pasadena residence.[145][n 10]

At approximately 3:00 a.m. on the morning of August 8, Henley and Kerley, accompanied by Williams, returned to Corll's residence.[146] Corll was furious that Henley had brought a girl to his house, telling him in private that he had "ruined everything". Henley explained that Williams had argued with her father that evening, and did not wish to return home.[7] Corll appeared to calm down and offered the trio beer and marijuana. The three then began drinking and smoking marijuana, with Henley and Kerley also sniffing paint fumes as Corll watched them intently before seemingly retiring to bed. After approximately two hours, Henley, Kerley, and Williams each passed out.[147]

Final confrontation

[edit]

Henley awoke to find himself lying on his stomach and Corll snapping handcuffs onto his wrists.[148] His mouth had been taped shut and his ankles had been bound together.[7] Kerley and Williams lay beside Henley, securely bound with nylon rope, gagged with adhesive tape, and lying face down on the floor. Kerley had been stripped naked.[149] Noting Henley had awoken, Corll removed the gag from his mouth. Henley protested in vain against Corll's actions, whereupon Corll reiterated that he was angry with Henley for bringing a girl to his house and that he intended to kill all three after he had assaulted and tortured Kerley, initially saying, "Man, you blew it bringing that girl,"[150] before shouting: "I'm gonna kill you all! But first I'm gonna have my fun!"[149] He then repeatedly kicked Williams in the chest, shouting, "Wake up, bitch!"[30]

Corll then lifted Henley to his feet and dragged him into his kitchen and placed a .22-caliber pistol against his stomach, threatening to shoot him.[149] Henley calmed Corll, promising to participate in the torture and murder of both Williams and Kerley if Corll released him.[151] After approximately thirty minutes of discussion,[152] Corll agreed and untied Henley, then separately carried Kerley and Williams into his bedroom and tied them to opposite sides of his torture board: Kerley on his stomach; Williams on her back.[148] A transistor radio was placed between Williams and Kerley and the volume turned to maximum to muffle any potential screaming.[153] Corll also removed the adhesive tape from Kerley's mouth before informing him of his intentions to "look up" his anus as Henley again began inhaling paint fumes from a paper bag.[154]

Corll then handed Henley an eighteen-inch hunting knife and ordered him to cut away Williams's clothes,[155] insisting that, while he would rape and kill Kerley, Henley would do likewise to Williams. He then shouted, "What are you waiting for?"[156][7] Henley began cutting away Williams's jeans and underwear as Corll placed the pistol on a bedside table, undressed and began to assault and torture Kerley. Both Kerley and Williams had awakened by this point. Kerley began writhing, pleading and shouting as Williams, whose gag Henley had removed, lifted her head and asked Henley, "Is this for real?" to which Henley answered, "Yes." Williams then asked Henley: "Are you going to do anything about it?"[157][n 11]

Corll's death

[edit]

In an apparent attempt to desensitize himself to the unfolding scenario, Henley stood and paced the room as he continued to inhale paint fumes.[159] He then asked Corll whether he might take Williams into another room. Corll ignored him and Henley then grabbed Corll's pistol, shouting, "You've gone far enough, Dean!"[160] As Corll clambered off Kerley, Henley elaborated: "I can't go on any longer! I can't have you kill all my friends!"[30] Corll approached Henley, saying, "Kill me, Wayne!"[149] Henley stepped back a few paces as Corll continued to advance upon him, shouting, "You won't do it!"[7] Henley then fired at Corll, hitting him in the forehead. The bullet failed to fully penetrate Corll's skull[161] and he continued to lurch toward Henley, whereupon the youth fired another two rounds, hitting Corll in the left shoulder,[162] with one bullet penetrating Corll's lung and lodging in his spine.[163] Corll began coughing up blood as he ran out of the room, trapping his right foot in a loose telephone wire and hitting the wall of the hallway.[164] Henley fired three additional bullets into his lower back and shoulder as Corll slid down the wall in the hallway outside the room where the two other teenagers were bound. Corll died where he fell, his naked body facing the wall.[165][101]

Henley would recall that immediately after he shot Corll, the sole thought in his mind was that Corll would have been proud of the way he had behaved during the confrontation, adding that Corll had been training him to react quickly and forcefully and that this was exactly what he had done.[101]

The body of Dean Corll as discovered at 2020 Lamar Drive

After Henley had shot Corll, he and Kerley began weeping as Kerley repeatedly thanked him for saving his life.[166] Henley then released Kerley and Williams from the torture board, and all three teenagers dressed and discussed what actions they should take. Henley suggested to Kerley and Williams that they should simply leave, although Williams initially refused—suggesting to Henley he should simply flee. Kerley then stated, "No, we should call the police." Henley agreed and looked up the number for the Pasadena Police Department (PPD) in Corll's telephone directory.[163][167]

Contacting police

[edit]

At 8:24 a.m. on August 8, 1973, Henley telephoned the PPD.[168][69] His call was answered by an operator named Velma Lines. In his call, Henley blurted to the operator: "Y'all better come here right now! I just killed a man!"[146] Henley gave the address to the operator as 2020 Lamar Drive, Pasadena.[169] As Kerley, Williams, and Henley waited outside Corll's home for the police to arrive, Henley mentioned to Kerley that he had "done that (killing by shooting) four or five times."[170]

Minutes later, a PPD patrol car arrived at 2020 Lamar Drive. The three were sitting on the curb outside the house, and the officer noted the .22 caliber pistol on the driveway near the trio. Two of the three were weeping. The officer observed the younger male slumped forward and rocking back and forth with his head in his hands while weeping as the sole female—also weeping—draped one arm across his shoulder; the slightly older male simply stared blankly across the street.[164] The younger male identified himself as Elmer Wayne Henley and told the officer that he was the individual who had made the call and indicated that Corll's body was inside the house.[171] After confiscating the pistol and placing Henley, Williams, and Kerley inside the patrol car, the officer entered the bungalow and discovered Corll's body inside the hallway. The officer returned to the car and read Henley his Miranda rights. In response, Henley shouted: "I don't care who knows about it! I have to get it off my chest!"[172]

Kerley later told detectives that before the first police officer arrived at Lamar Drive, Henley had informed him, "If you wasn't my friend, I could have gotten $200 for you."[173][174]

Accomplices' confessions

[edit]

In PPD custody, Henley was initially questioned about the killing of Corll. He recounted the events of the previous evening and that morning, explaining that he had shot Corll in self-defense. The statements given by Kerley and Williams corroborated Henley's account, and the detective questioning Henley believed he had indeed acted in self-defense.[175]

When questioned regarding his claim that as Corll had threatened him that morning he had shouted that he had killed several boys,[174] Henley explained that for almost three years, Brooks and he had helped procure teenage boys for Corll, who had raped and murdered them. Henley gave a verbal statement; stating he initially had believed the boys he had abducted were to be sold into a Dallas-based organization for "homosexual acts, sodomy, maybe later killing,"[176] but soon learned Corll was himself killing the victims procured. Henley admitted he had assisted Corll in several abductions and murders, and that he had actively participated in the torture and mutilation of "six or eight" victims prior to their murder.[177][178] Most victims had been buried in a Southwest Houston boat shed, with others buried at Lake Sam Rayburn and High Island Beach.[179] Corll had paid up to $200 for each victim Brooks or he were able to lure to his apartment.[180][n 12]

Police initially were skeptical of Henley's claims, assuming the sole homicide of the case was that of Corll, which they had ascribed as being the result of drug-fueled fisticuffs that had turned deadly. Henley was quite insistent, however, and upon his recalling the names of three boys—Cobble, Hilligiest, and Jones—whom he stated he and Brooks had procured for Corll, the police accepted that there was something to his claims, as all three teenagers were listed as missing at Houston Police Department (HPD) headquarters. Hilligiest had been reported missing in the summer of 1971; the other two boys had been missing for just two weeks. Moreover, the floor of the room where the three teenagers had been tied was covered in thick plastic sheeting. Police also found a plywood torture board measuring 8 by 3 feet (2.44 by 0.91 m) with handcuffs attached to nylon rope at two corners, and nylon ropes to the other two.[161] Also found at Corll's address were a large hunting knife, rolls of clear plastic of the same type used to cover the floor, a portable radio rigged to a pair of dry cells to give increased volume,[181] an electric motor with loose wires attached,[182] eight pairs of handcuffs, a number of dildos, thin glass tubes, and lengths of rope.[7]

Corll's Ford Econoline van parked in the driveway conveyed a similar impression. The rear windows of the van were sealed by opaque blue curtains. In the rear of the vehicle, police found a coil of rope, a swatch of beige rug covered in soil stains,[181] and a wooden crate with air holes drilled in the sides. The pegboard walls inside the rear of the van were rigged with several rings and hooks.[183] Another wooden crate with air holes drilled in the sides was found in Corll's backyard. Inside this crate were several strands of human hair.[184]

He (Henley) started to take a step inside (the boat shed), but then his face just turned ashen, pale, grim ... he staggered around outside the door. Right then's when I knew there were going to be bodies in that shed.

Houston Police officer Karl Siebeneicher describing Henley's actions upon leading police to Corll's boat shed on August 8.[185]

Search for victims

[edit]

Henley agreed to accompany police to Corll's boat shed in Southwest Houston, where he claimed the bodies of several victims could be found.[186] Inside the boat shed, police found a half-stripped stolen Chevrolet Camaro, a child's bike, a large iron drum, water containers, two sacks of lime,[7] two shovels, a broken rake,[187] and a large plastic bag full of teenage boys' clothing.[185]

Two prison trusties[188] began digging through the soft, crushed-shell earth of the boat shed and soon uncovered the body of a blond-haired teenaged boy, lying on his side, encased in clear plastic and buried beneath a layer of lime.[189] Police continued excavating through the earth of the shed, unearthing the remains of more victims in varying stages of decomposition.[7] Most of the bodies found were wrapped in thick, clear plastic sheeting. Some victims had been shot, others strangled,[190] the ligatures still wrapped tightly around their necks.[n 13]

The interior of Corll's rented boat shed, pictured immediately prior to the search for victims on August 8, 1973

All of the victims found had been sodomized and most victims found bore evidence of sexual torture: pubic hairs had been plucked out,[n 14] genitals had been chewed, objects had been inserted into their rectums, and glass rods had been inserted into their urethrae and smashed.[7][108][n 15] Cloth rags had also been inserted into the victims' mouths and adhesive tape wound around their faces to muffle their screams.[194] The tongue of the first victim uncovered protruded over one inch beyond the tooth margin;[195] the mouth of the third victim unearthed on August 8 was so agape that all upper and lower teeth were visible, leading investigators to theorize the youth had died screaming.[196] After the recovery of the eighth body from the boat shed was completed at 11:55 p.m., the search for further bodies was discontinued until the following day.[197][198]

Accompanied by his father, Brooks presented himself at HPD headquarters on the evening of August 8 and gave a statement in which he denied any knowledge of or participation in the murders[199] but admitted to having known that Corll had raped and killed two teenagers in 1970 and naming two youths—Ruben Haney and Mark Scott—whom he had seen in Corll's company immediately before their disappearances.[200]

On the morning of August 9, Henley gave a full written statement detailing his and Brooks's involvement with Corll in the abduction and murder of numerous youths. In this confession, Henley readily admitted to having personally killed approximately nine[201] youths and to have assisted Corll in the strangulation of others.[90] He stated the "only three" abductions and murders Brooks had not assisted him and Corll with were committed in the summer of 1973. That afternoon, Henley accompanied police to Lake Sam Rayburn, where he, Brooks, and Corll had buried four victims killed that year.[202] Two additional bodies were found in shallow, lime-soaked graves located close to a dirt road. Inside the lakeside log cabin owned by Corll's family, police found a second plywood torture board, rolls of plastic sheeting, shovels, and a sack of lime.[203]

Police found nine additional bodies in the boat shed on August 9, with four separate arm bones not belonging to any victim also recovered close to the body of the twelfth victim exhumed.[204][205] These bodies were recovered between 12:05 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.,[206][207] and all were in an advanced state of decomposition.[208] The twelfth body unearthed bore evidence of sexual mutilation (the severed genitals of the victim were found inside a sealed plastic bag placed beside the body);[209][210] another victim unearthed had several fractured ribs. The thirteenth and fourteenth bodies unearthed bore identification cards naming the victims as Donald and Jerry Waldrop.[211][212]

Brooks gave a full confession on the morning of August 10,[213][214] admitting to being present at several killings and assisting in several burials, although he continued to deny any direct participation in the murders.[215][n 16] In reference to the torture board upon which Corll had restrained and tortured his victims, Brooks stated: "Once they were on the board, they were as good as dead; it was all over, but the shouting and the crying."[217] In reference to the actual murders, Brooks stated his witnessing the victims' deaths "didn't bother [him]", adding "I saw it done many times."[218] He agreed to accompany police to High Island Beach to assist in the search for the bodies of the victims.[219]

Henley (left) and Brooks (right), pictured at High Island Beach. August 10, 1973.

On August 10, 1973, Henley again accompanied police to Lake Sam Rayburn, where two more bodies were found buried just 10 feet (3 m) apart. As with the two bodies found the previous day, both victims had been tortured and severely beaten, particularly around the head.[220] That afternoon, both Henley and Brooks accompanied police to High Island Beach, leading police to the shallow graves of two victims.[221] On August 13, both Henley and Brooks again accompanied the police to High Island Beach, where four more bodies were found, making a total of 27 known victims – the worst killing spree in American history at the time.[222] Henley initially insisted that there were two more bodies to be found inside the boat shed and that the bodies of two more boys had been buried at High Island Beach in 1972.[223]

At the time, the killing spree was the worst case of serial murder, in terms of the number of victims, in the United States, exceeding the 25 murders attributed to Juan Corona, who had been arrested in California in 1971 for killing 25 men. The macabre record number of known victims attributed to a single murder case set by Corll and his accomplices was surpassed only in 1978 by John Wayne Gacy, who murdered 33 boys and young men and who admitted to being influenced by press coverage of the Houston Mass Murders to manacle his victims prior to their abuse and murder.[224]

Families of Corll's victims were highly critical of the HPD,[225][226] which had been quick to list the missing boys as runaways who had not been considered worthy of any major investigation.[227] The families of the murdered youths asserted that the police should have noted an insidious trend in the pattern of disappearances of teenage boys from the Heights neighborhood;[30] other family members complained the HPD had been dismissive of their adamant insistence that their sons had no reason to run away from home. Everett Waldrop, the father of Donald and Jerry Waldrop, complained that shortly after his sons had disappeared in 1971, he had informed police an acquaintance had observed Corll burying what appeared to be bodies at his boat shed. In response, the police performed a perfunctory search around the boat shed, before dismissing the reports as a hoax.[228] Waldrop stated that on one of the many occasions when he visited the HPD,[229] the police chief had simply told him, "Why are you down here? You know your boys are runaways."[230] The mother of Gregory Malley Winkle stated: "You don't run away (from home) with nothing but a bathing suit and 80 cents."[231][n 17]

By May 1974, 21 of Corll's victims had been identified, with all but four of the youths having either lived in or had close connections to Houston Heights.[72] Two more teenagers were identified in 1983 and 1985; one of whom, Richard Kepner, had originally lived in Humble, Texas, but had relocated to Spring Branch shortly before his disappearance to train as a carpenter's helper.[233][234] The other youth, Willard Branch,[235] lived in the Oak Forest district of Houston.[236]

Indictment

[edit]

On August 13, a grand jury convened in Harris County to hear evidence against Henley and Brooks: the first witnesses to testify were Williams and Kerley, who testified to the events of August 7 and 8 leading to the death of Corll.[237] Another witness who testified to his experience at the hands of Corll was William Ridinger, who recounted his abuse at Corll's Schuler Street address before he was released. Also to testify at the hearing were the investigators who recounted the various statements and confessions provided by Henley and Brooks in the days following Corll's death and individuals tasked with supervising the exhumation of the victims' bodies.[238]

After listening to over six hours of testimony, on August 14, the grand jury indicted Henley on three counts of murder and Brooks on one count. Bail for each youth was set at $100,000.[239] Henley was not charged with the death of Corll, which prosecutors would ultimately rule on September 18 had been committed in self-defense.[240][241]

By the time the grand jury had completed its investigation, Henley had been indicted for six murders, and Brooks for four.[242] Both would later reject pretrial offers presented to them by Assistant District Attorney Don Lambright of life sentences in exchange for pleas of guilty to the murders for which they had been indicted.[243] A pretrial motion that Henley undergo a psychiatric examination to determine whether he was mentally competent to stand trial was also opposed by his attorney, Charles Melder, upon the grounds the ruling would violate Henley's constitutional rights.[244]

Trials and convictions

[edit]

Henley

[edit]

Elmer Wayne Henley and David Owen Brooks were tried separately for their roles in the murders. Henley was brought to trial before Judge Preston Dial in San Antonio on July 1, 1974,[245] charged with six murders committed between March 1972 and July 1973. Upon advice from his defense counsel, Henley did not take the stand to testify.[246] His attorney, William Gray, did cross-examine several witnesses, but did not call any witnesses or experts for the defense.[247][248]

The prosecution called twenty-four witnesses, including Kerley and Ridinger,[249] and introduced eighty-two pieces of evidence, including Corll's torture board and one of the boxes used to transport the victims.[250] Inside the box, police had found hair which examiners testified came from both Cobble and Henley.[251] The defense called no witnesses to testify on Henley's behalf.[252]

One of the witnesses to testify as to Henley's involvement in the abductions and murders on behalf of the prosecution was Detective David Mack Mullican, who read from Henley's written statements. In one part of his confession, Henley had described luring two of the victims for whose murder he had been brought to trial, Cobble and Jones, to Corll's Pasadena residence.[253] Henley had confessed that after their initial abuse and torture at Corll's home, Cobble and Jones each had one wrist and ankle bound to the same side of Corll's torture board. The youths were then forced by Corll to fight each other with the promise that the one who beat the other to death would be allowed to live. After they had spent several hours beating each other, Jones was tied to a board and forced to watch Cobble again be assaulted, tortured, and shot to death before he himself was again raped, tortured, and strangled with a Venetian blind cord.[252][n 18] Cobble and Jones were killed on July 27, 1973, two days after they had been reported missing. Several victims' parents had to leave the courtroom to regain their composure as police and medical examiners described how their relatives were tortured and murdered.[255]

On July 15, 1974, both counsels presented their closing arguments to the jury:[256] the prosecution seeking life imprisonment; the defense a verdict of not guilty. In his closing argument to the jury, District Attorney Carol Vance apologized for not being able to seek the death penalty, adding that the case was the "most extreme example of man's inhumanity to man I have ever seen."[257]

The jury deliberated for 92 minutes before finding Henley guilty of all six murders for which he was tried.[258] The following day, July 16,[259] formal procedures to sentence Henley for the six guilty verdicts began, and on August 8, Judge Preston Dial ordered that Henley serve each 99-year sentence consecutively (totaling 594 years), and he was transferred to the Huntsville Unit to formally begin his sentence.[260]

Henley appealed his sentence and conviction, contending the jury in his initial trial had not been sequestered, that his attorneys' objections to news media being present in the courtroom had been overruled, and citing that his defense team's attempts to present evidence contending that the initial trial should not have been held in San Antonio had also been overruled by the judge. Henley's appeal was upheld and he was awarded a retrial in December 1978.[261]

Henley's retrial began on June 18, 1979. This second trial was held in Corpus Christi,[262] with Henley again represented by defense attorneys William Gray and Edwin Pegelow.[263] Henley's attorneys again attempted to have Henley's written statements ruled inadmissible. However, Judge Noah Kennedy ruled the written statements given by Henley on August 9, 1973, as admissible evidence. The retrial lasted nine days, with Henley's attorneys again calling no defense witnesses and again attacking the credibility of Henley's written confession. The defense also contended the evidence provided by the state "belonged to Dean Corll, not Elmer Wayne Henley". On June 27, 1979, the jury deliberated for over two hours before reaching their verdict; Henley was again convicted of six murders and again sentenced to six 99-year terms, only to run concurrently this time rather than consecutively.[241]

Brooks

[edit]

David Brooks was brought to trial before Judge William Hatten in Houston on February 27, 1975.[264][265] He had been indicted for four murders committed between December 1970 and June 1973,[266] but was brought to trial charged only with the June 1973 murder of 15-year-old William Ray Lawrence.[267]

Brooks's defense attorney, Jim Skelton, argued that his client had not committed any murders and attempted to portray Corll and, to a lesser degree, Henley as being the active participants in the actual killings.[268] Assistant District Attorney Tommy Dunn dismissed the defense's contention outright, at one point telling the jury: "Was he an innocent bystander? This defendant was in on this killing, this murderous rampage, from the very beginning. He tells you he was a cheerleader if nothing else. That's what he was telling you about his presence. You know he was in on it."[267][269]

Skelton emphasized within his 40-minute closing argument that the state had based their entire case upon circumstantial evidence[270] and that they had only proven Brooks to be an accessory to murder as opposed to guilty of murder itself, stating: "The state has proven David Owen Brooks of being an accessory to murder; the state has not established a murder case. They have proved accessory to murder—not murder. Before you convict, you've got to find an act to punish."[271]

Brooks's trial lasted less than one week. The jury deliberated for just 90 minutes before they reached a verdict. He was found guilty of Lawrence's murder on March 4, 1975, and sentenced to life imprisonment. Brooks showed no emotion as the sentence was passed, although his wife burst into tears.[267] Brooks also appealed his sentence, contending that the signed confessions used against him were taken without his being informed of his legal rights, but his appeal was dismissed in May 1979.[272]

Incarceration

[edit]

Henley is serving his life sentence at the Mark Stiles Unit in Jefferson County, Texas.[273] Successive parole applications dating from July 1980 have been denied. He was most recently denied parole in November 2025.[274][275]

Brooks served his life sentence at the Terrell Unit near Rosharon, Texas. He died of COVID-19-related complications at a Galveston hospital on May 28, 2020, at the age of 65.[276][277] Brooks is buried at Captain Joe Byrd Cemetery in Walker County.[278]

Victims

[edit]

Corll and his accomplices are known to have killed a minimum of twenty-nine teenagers and young men between September 1970 and August 1973, although it is suspected that the true number of victims is higher. As Corll was killed immediately prior to his murders being discovered, the true number of victims he had claimed will never be known.[30] Twenty-seven of Corll's known victims have been identified, and the identity of a twenty-eighth victim whose body has never been found, Mark Scott, is conclusively known. All of these victims were killed by either shooting, strangulation or a combination of both.[1]

1970

[edit]
  • September 25: Jeffrey Alan Konen, 18. A student at the University of Texas at Austin abducted while hitchhiking from Austin to the Braeswood Place district of Houston. He was buried at High Island Beach.[279]
  • December 13: James Eugene Glass, 14. An acquaintance of Corll who also knew Brooks. Glass was last seen by his brother in the company of Danny Yates walking toward the exit of the church the trio had attended. He was strangled with a cord and buried inside the boat shed.[280]
  • December 13: Danny Michael Yates, 14. Lured with his friend James Glass from a Heights evangelical rally by Brooks to Corll's Yorktown apartment. He and his friend were strangled before being buried in a common grave in Corll's boat shed.[30]

1971

[edit]
  • January 30: Donald Wayne Waldrop, 15. Disappeared with his brother while walking home from a friend's house. According to Brooks, Donald's father, who was a builder, was working on the apartment next to Corll's at the time that Donald and his brother were murdered.[281]
Donald (left) and Jerry Waldrop
  • January 30: Jerry Lynn Waldrop, 13. The youngest of Corll's victims. He and his brother were strangled the day after their abduction and buried in a common grave inside Corll's boat shed.[282]
  • March 9: Randell Lee Harvey, 15. Disappeared on his way to his job as a gas station attendant; he was shot once in the head and buried in Corll's boat shed. Remains identified October 2008.
  • May 29: David William Hilligiest, 13. One of Henley's earliest childhood friends; Hilligiest was last seen in the company of his friend Gregory Malley Winkle walking to a local swimming pool, before climbing into a white van.[283]
  • May 29: Gregory Malley Winkle, 16. A former employee of Corll Candy Company and boyfriend of Randell Harvey's sister. Winkle last phoned his mother claiming he and Hilligiest were swimming in Freeport. His body was found in the boat shed with the cord used to strangle him knotted around his neck.[284]
  • July 1: Donald John Falcon, 17. Originally from Corpus Christi. Falcon was last seen close to his parents' West University Place apartment complex. Several appendage bones belonging to Falcon were recovered from the boat shed in 1973 and identified via DNA analysis in 2014.[78]
  • August 17: Ruben Willfard Watson Haney, 17. Left his home to visit the cinema on the afternoon of August 17. Haney later called his mother to tell her he was spending the evening with Brooks. He was gagged, strangled and buried in Corll's boat shed.[285][82]

1972

[edit]
  • March 24: Frank Anthony Aguirre, 18. Aguirre had been engaged to marry Rhonda Williams, whose presence in Corll's house would later spark the fatal confrontation between Henley and Corll. He was strangled and buried at High Island Beach.[286][287][288]
  • April 20: Mark Steven Scott, 17. An acquaintance of both Henley and Brooks who was killed at Corll's Schuler Street address. He was forced to write a letter to his parents claiming that he had found a job in Austin. According to Henley, Scott was strangled by himself and Corll the following morning and buried at High Island Beach, although his remains were never found.[289][290]
  • May 21: Johnny Ray Delome, 16. A Heights youth who was last seen with his friend walking to a local store to purchase soft drinks. He was shot in the head, then strangled by Henley with the assistance of Corll.[291]
  • May 21: Billy Gene Baulch Jr., 17. A former employee of Corll Candy Company. Baulch was forced to write a letter to his parents claiming he and Delome had found employment "for a trucker loading and unloading from Houston to Washington" before he was strangled by Henley and buried at High Island Beach.[50]
  • July 19: Steven Kent Sickman, 17. Sickman was last seen leaving a party on Ella Boulevard. He suffered several fractured ribs before he was strangled with a nylon cord and buried in the boat shed. Remains misidentified December 1993 and correctly identified March 2011.[292]
  • c. August 21: Roy Eugene Bunton, 19. Disappeared on his way to work at a shoe store. He was shot twice in the head and buried in the boat shed. Remains misidentified October 1973 and correctly identified November 2011.[293][294]
  • October 3: Wally Jay Simoneaux, 14. Lured with his friend into Brooks's Corvette on the evening of October 3. Simoneaux attempted to phone his mother at Corll's residence before the call was terminated. He was strangled and buried in the boat shed.[295][40][296]
Richard Hembree
  • October 3: Richard Edward Hembree, 13. Last seen alongside his friend in a vehicle parked outside a Heights grocery store. He was shot in the mouth and strangled at Corll's Westcott Towers address.[122][297]
  • c. November 1: Willard Karmon Branch Jr., 18. The son of an HPD officer who subsequently died of a heart attack in the search for his son.[298] Branch was emasculated before he was shot in the head and buried in the boat shed. Remains identified July 1985.[299][300]
  • November 11: Richard Alan Kepner, 19. Vanished on his way to call his fiancée from a pay phone, he was strangled and buried at High Island Beach. Remains identified September 1983.[301][302]

1973

[edit]
  • February 3: Joseph Allen Lyles, 17. An acquaintance of Corll who lived on the same street as Brooks. He was seen by Brooks to be "grabbed" by Corll at his Wirt Road address and was subsequently buried at Jefferson County Beach.[303] Remains located August 1983 and identified November 2009.[304][305]
  • June 4: William Ray Lawrence, 15. A friend of Henley who phoned his father to ask if he could go fishing with "some friends." He was kept alive by Corll for three days before he was strangled with a cord and buried at Lake Sam Rayburn.[306][45][307]
  • June 15: Raymond Stanley Blackburn, 20. A married man from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, who vanished while hitchhiking from the Heights to see his newborn child. Blackburn had arrived in Houston three months before his abduction to work on a construction project.[308] He was strangled by Corll at his Lamar Drive residence and buried at Lake Sam Rayburn.[309]
  • July 7: Homer Louis Garcia, 15. Met Henley while both youths were enrolled at a Bellaire driving school. He was shot in the head and chest and left to bleed to death in Corll's bathtub before being buried at Lake Sam Rayburn.[310]
  • July 12: John Manning Sellars, 17. An Orange County youth killed two days before his 18th birthday. Sellars was killed by four gunshots to the chest and buried at High Island Beach. He was the only victim to be buried fully clothed.[311]
  • July 19: Michael Anthony Baulch, 15. Corll had killed his older brother, Billy, the previous year. He was strangled and buried at Lake Sam Rayburn. Remains identified September 2010.[312]
  • July 25: Marty Ray Jones, 18. Jones was last seen along with his friend and roommate, Charles Cobble, walking along 27th Street in the company of Henley. He was strangled with a Venetian blind cord and buried in the boat shed.[254]
Charles Cobble
  • July 25: Charles Cary Cobble, 17. A school friend of Henley whose wife was pregnant at the time of his murder; Cobble last phoned his father in a state of hysteria claiming he and Jones had been kidnapped by drug dealers. His body, shot twice in the head, was found in the boat shed.[196][313]
  • August 3: James Stanton Dreymala, 13. Corll's final victim. Dreymala was last seen riding his bicycle in Pasadena; he last called his girlfriend claiming he was in the Montrose neighborhood of Houston. He was strangled and buried in the boat shed.[309][314]

Footnotes

  • At Henley's trial in 1974, Harris County medical examiner Joseph Jachimczyk raised questions as to whether John Sellars was actually a victim of Corll.[315] Sellars, a U.S. Marine who had been reported missing on July 12, 1973,[316] had been killed by four gunshot wounds to the chest fired from a rifle, whereas all of Corll's other known victims had been either shot with the same pistol that Henley had used to kill Corll, strangled, or both. Moreover, Sellars's car had been found burned-out in Starks, Louisiana, one week after Sellars had disappeared.[315]
  • Police had been led to Sellars's body on August 13, 1973, by a trucker who recalled conversing with a youth he believed to be Henley after he had seen a car stuck in the sand close to where Sellars's body was subsequently found. The youth had rebuffed the trucker's offer to help free the car, stating he had two friends with him who would free the vehicle.[317] Neither Henley nor Brooks specifically mentioned Sellars being a victim of Corll's in their confessions, nor have they disputed his being a victim, although Henley had informed investigators he was unaware of any victims having been buried at High Island since late 1972.[318]
  • The official tally of victims was reduced to twenty-six in 1974 after Dr. Jachimczyk testified Sellars "probably was not" murdered by Corll and his accomplices.[n 19] However, Sellars was of the same age as Corll's known victims, although his grave on High Island Beach was located over two miles from the other five victims buried at this location.[320] In addition, his body was found bound hand and foot with rope as other victims had been, and Sellars's autopsy report indicates a possibility of his being sexually assaulted prior to or after death.[321]

Forensic developments

[edit]

In June 2008, Dr. Sharon Derrick, a forensic anthropologist with the medical examiner's office in Houston, released digital images of Corll's three still-unidentified victims. These victims were listed as ML73-3349, ML73-3356 and ML73-3378. Two of the unidentified victims were found buried in the boat shed and were estimated to have been killed in 1971 or 1972.[322][323] ML73-3378 was buried at Lake Sam Rayburn just 10 feet (3 m) from the body of Homer Garcia, who had disappeared on July 7, 1973.[324]

On October 17, 2008, ML73-3349 was identified as Randell Lee Harvey, a Heights teenager who had been reported missing on March 11, 1971 – two days after he had disappeared. Harvey, who had been shot through the eye,[74] was wearing a navy blue jacket with red lining, jeans and lace-up boots. A plastic orange pocket comb was also found alongside his body.

A body found on a beach in Jefferson County on August 4, 1983, has been conclusively linked to Corll. The scattered skeletal remains were discovered within and close to plastic sheeting near an eroding sandbank,[325] along with sections of rope. These remains were listed as ML83-6849.[326][120] The body was identified November 11, 2009, through DNA analysis as 17-year-old Joseph Lyles, a Spring Branch teenager who had disappeared on February 3, 1973.[n 20] Lyles is known to have both visited Corll's apartment and to have lived on the same street as Brooks. He was listed as a possible victim of Corll after the other murders were discovered in 1973.[327] At the time of his disappearance, Corll resided in an apartment at 1855 Wirt Road, where he lived between January 20 and March 1, 1973, when he moved to his father's Pasadena bungalow.[76][328] Brooks had specifically stated Corll had "got one boy by himself" during the time he lived at this address. In addition, at the time that Lyles disappeared, Henley had temporarily moved to Mount Pleasant,[329] which leaves a strong possibility that Corll had killed Lyles without the assistance of Henley.

Michael Baulch. His body was correctly identified via DNA analysis in 2010.

On September 13, 2010, DNA analysis was able to confirm that the unidentified victim known as ML73-3378 was actually Michael Anthony Baulch, who had incorrectly been identified as case file ML73-3333: the second victim unearthed from the boat shed.[330] Baulch had disappeared en route to a barbershop on July 19, 1973—a year after his brother, Billy, had been murdered by Corll. The 1973 misidentification of Michael Baulch was discovered as a result of an independent investigation conducted by freelance writers Barbara Gibson and Debera Phinney, who contacted Dr. Derrick with a tip indicating that the second victim unearthed from the boat shed had been misidentified; upon conducting additional DNA testing, Dr. Derrick discovered their suspicions were correct.[30]

Henley had stated in his confession to police that he and Corll had "choked" Michael Baulch and buried him at Lake Sam Rayburn. The unidentified victim mistakenly identified as Baulch had been killed by two gunshots to the head and buried inside the boat shed.[331] Three factors helped lead to the 1973 misidentification of Baulch: Michael's parents had previously filed a missing persons report on their son (who had previously left home to search for his older brother)[332] in August 1972—precisely the same time as the second victim unearthed from the boat shed was estimated to have been killed. This was the only missing persons report on file for Michael Baulch. In addition, the victim was of a similar height to Baulch and circumstantial dental fractures had also helped facilitate the misidentification.

On November 4, 2011, the victim mistakenly identified as Baulch (case file ML73-3333) was identified through DNA analysis as Roy Eugene Bunton, a Heights teenager who was last seen by his family heading for work at a Houston shoe store on or about August 21, 1972. Bunton's family had always believed him to be a victim of Corll and had contacted Dr. Derrick in 2009 to submit a DNA sample for comparison with the unidentified bodies. Initially, the results conducted had been negative due to the misidentification of Bunton's remains as being those of Baulch. However, upon discovering the 1973 misidentification of Baulch's remains, DNA samples obtained from Bunton's family were compared to those taken from the body mistakenly identified as being that of Baulch and these proved to be a conclusive match to Bunton.[112]

In the confession given by Henley on August 9, 1973, the youth had stated that victim Mark Scott had been strangled and buried at High Island. Brooks had also stated in his confession that Scott was likely buried at High Island. Scott had been a blond youth who had not had any teeth extracted prior to his disappearance; however, Dr. Elizabeth Johnson of the Harris County Medical Institute had concluded in 1993 that the fifteenth set of remains unearthed from the boat shed—which had physical characteristics such as dark brown hair and two extracted molars—were those of Scott. Dr. Johnson had based her findings upon comparison of DNA analysis of a blood sample taken from Scott's mother with the remains unearthed from the boat shed, stating with a 98.5% degree of accuracy the decedent had been related to Scott's mother.[333]

In a 2010 interview granted to investigative reporter Barbara Gibson, Henley disputed the 1993 identification of a victim buried in the boat shed as Scott and reiterated his claim that Scott had been buried at High Island "in the sand: fetal position; head up," adding that he had repeatedly argued this point with Dr. Jachimczyk.[334]

As a result of Henley's claims, DNA tests on the body initially identified as Scott were again tested against samples of DNA taken from Scott's family. In March 2011, DNA analysis confirmed that the victim known as ML73-3355 had been misidentified and the same month, the victim was identified as Steven Kent Sickman, a 17-year-old who was last seen walking down West 34th Street shortly before midnight on July 19, 1972. He was murdered at Corll's Westcott Towers address. Sickman's mother had reported her son missing shortly after his disappearance, but police had been unwilling to conduct a search for the youth, telling the mother that he was 17 years old and that unless they found a body, there was nothing they could do to assist her. Had Henley not been adamant in his assertion that the body of Scott had been misidentified, it is likely Sickman would have never been conclusively confirmed as a victim of Corll.[333]

All six bodies directly linked to the Houston Mass Murders found at High Island have been identified. As Henley's claim that the victim known as ML73-3355 was not Scott has been proven to be correct, a strong suspicion remains that Scott's body remains buried on High Island.[30]

Four arm bones discovered between the remains of the twelfth and sixteenth victims discovered within the boat shed on August 9, 1973, would be determined via DNA analysis to belong to neither victim. Via familial DNA profiling, in 2014, the University of North Texas Health Science Center determined all four of these appendages belonged to a 17-year-old named Donald John Falcon, who had disappeared on July 1, 1971.[335] Although not officially confirmed as a twenty-ninth victim of Corll—with Falcon's cause of death listed as "unknown" due to the fact a human can survive the severance/removal of the four forearm bones in question—several forensic anthropologists, including Dr. Sharon Derrick, consider Falcon a definitive twenty-ninth victim of Corll.[336][337]

Unidentified victim

[edit]

Corll's only known unidentified victim—the sixteenth body found in the boat shed—was in an advanced stage of decomposition at the time of his discovery, leading investigators to deduce that he had likely been killed in 1971 or 1972. This unidentified victim was found wearing red-white-and-blue striped swimming trunks,[338] cowboy boots, a leather bracelet and a long-sleeved, khaki-colored T-shirt decorated with a peace symbol,[339][340] leading investigators to conclude that he was likely killed in the summer months.[341] In addition, his T-shirt bore a handwritten inscription believed to read either "LB4MF", "LBHMF",[339] or "L84MF".[342] He had dark hair and may have had spina bifida, a congenital disability that could have affected his gait, or caused chronic pain.[342] This victim has been referred to as "John Houston Doe" since the discovery of his body, but is also informally known as "Swimsuit Boy".[340]

This unidentified victim was found buried near the entrance to the boat shed between the bodies of Steven Sickman and Ruben Haney, whereas the bodies of the victims killed between December 1970 and May 1971 were found buried at the rear of the shed.[73][211] It is likely, though not conclusive, that the unidentified sixteenth victim found within the boat shed may have been killed in the late summer or early fall of 1971. Dr. Derrick has stated that she believes this particular victim may be named Harman, Harmon or French,[339] as the only outstanding missing persons reports relating to youths from the Houston area dated between 1970 and 1973, which fit the forensic profile of this unknown youth, include these surnames. One of these individuals, 15-year-old John Harmon, had been a Heights teenager reported missing in 1971. He is last known to have phoned his parents claiming to need money in much the same manner as victims Charles Cobble and Marty Jones had been forced to telephone their parents before their murder.[343]

Dr. Derrick has stated she has reason to believe this victim may be named Robert (or "Bobby") French,[344] adding she has received an anonymous package containing a series of photographs potentially depicting this individual taken shortly before his murder, and that the sender of this package named this individual as one Bobby French.[344]

In 2022, authorities announced that the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and the Harris County Institute of Forensic Science are actively working together to identify this victim. An updated facial reconstruction was released to the media in August 2023.[345]

Possible additional victims

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Unrecovered remains

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Forty-two boys had vanished from Houston Heights between 1970 and Corll's death in 1973.[346] The police were heavily criticized for curtailing the search for further victims once the record set by Juan Corona for having the most victims had been surpassed. After finding the 26th and 27th bodies, tied together, at High Island Beach on August 13, the search for any further victims was terminated,[347] despite Henley's insistence that two further bodies had been buried on the beach in 1972. A curious feature about this final discovery was the presence of two extra bones (an arm bone and a pelvis) in the grave, indicating at least one additional, undiscovered victim.[348] Investigators later returned to the scene where these extra bones were discovered in efforts to locate any additional human remains at the site of their discovery, although this search yielded no further remains.[349][n 21]

The two bodies that Henley had insisted were still buried on the beach may have been those of Scott and Lyles. In light of developments relating to the identifications of victims, the body of Scott still lies undiscovered at High Island, while Lyles's remains were only found by chance in 1983. Had the search for bodies continued, both victims would have likely been discovered. Following Hurricane Ike in 2008, the area of High Island Beach where Corll is known to have buried his victims remains submerged, leaving a strong possibility that Scott's body will never be found.[30] Furthermore, Henley also insisted the bodies of two further victims remained buried within the boat shed. His claims were disputed, with one officer informing reporters on August 9: "If there's nineteen [victims] in here, we missed two, but we've been over every inch of this ground."[351]

How that man was able to go out to that storage shed, time after time, and bury one more dead boy is something I'll never understand. You get close to evil like that, no matter how long ago it was, and it never leaves you.

Detective David Mullican, recollecting the Houston Mass Murders, April 2011.[30]

In addition to the arm bones recovered from the boat shed identified via DNA analysis in 2014 as belonging to victim Donald Falcon, investigators also recovered a portion of a child's cranium determined to belong to a boy of either nine or ten years of age. A forensic analysis of this skull portion revealed the condition of this section of bone to be similar to other bones recovered at this location and likely not an incidental archeological recovery, thus indicating the bodies of two Corll victims—one still unidentified—remain buried at this location.[352]

Although in his August 10 confession, Brooks had informed investigators he believed victim Jerry Waldrop was Corll's youngest victim, he did inform investigators that afternoon that the youngest murder victim had been "about nine" and the son of a grocer.[223] Contemporary investigative records do refer to a missing prepubescent boy named Albright whom investigators had considered as a possible individual Brooks had been referring to; however, all the victims recovered in 1973 had been older than this child.[352]

Former employees of Corll Candy Company recalled Corll doing a lot of digging in the years leading up to 1968, when his mother's third marriage was deteriorating and the firm was failing. Corll stated he was burying spoiled candy to avoid contamination by insects. He subsequently cemented over the floor. He was also observed digging in waste ground that was later converted into a parking lot.[353] These former workers also recalled that Corll had rolls of clear plastic of precisely the same type used to bury his victims. Moreover, co-workers at HL&P also stated that, from the earliest days of his employment, Corll had repeatedly retained coils of used nylon cord that would otherwise have been discarded. This brand of cord was the same type used to strangle and bind the bodies of many of his victims.[354] The suspicion is that Corll began killing much earlier than 1970 and had been abusing youths prior to this date.[355]

Moreover, in one interview, Brooks claimed that Corll's first murder victim was a youth killed at an apartment complex located at 1353 Judiway Street, where Corll had lived between October 7 and November 10, 1968, and when Brooks himself had been thirteen years old.[356][51] The earliest of Corll's victims mentioned by Brooks in his confession were two teenage boys killed at 3300 Yorktown, where Corll had only resided between October 1970 and January 1971.[357] Corll's earliest double murder, that of Glass and Yates, took place in December 1970; those victims were actually killed at Corll's Yorktown address.[56] A possibility exists that the earliest double murder victims were Glass and Yates; however, in his confession to police, Brooks specifically described Glass as being murdered at an altogether separate address Corll had resided in at the time of his first double murder. In addition, Brooks only knew the location of Konen's body at High Island Beach because Corll had shown it to him.[122] It is possible that the initial double murder Brooks had discovered Corll in the process of committing occurred after the murder of Konen and before those of Glass and Yates.[67]

The confessions of Henley and Brooks separately describe two murders having occurred on unknown dates between September 25, 1971, and early March 1972: a youth Brooks described as having been murdered at Corll's apartment on Columbia Street immediately prior to Henley's involvement in the crimes and the unidentified first teenager whose abduction Henley had participated in shortly prior to the murder of Frank Aguirre. However, only one unidentified murder victim linked to the case remains meaning that, if the unidentified victim discovered in the boat shed is actually one of these two individuals, a further victim remains undiscovered. These details, alongside the two additional bones that were found with the 26th and 27th victims discovered at High Island, the section of a child's cranium recovered from the boat shed,[352] plus the unidentified victim killed at Judiway Street, indicate a minimum of four and possibly seven more unknown victims.[61]

There are two suspiciously long gaps between known victims in the chronology of Corll's known murders. His last known victim of 1971 was Ruben Watson Haney, who disappeared on August 17. The first victim of 1972 was Frank Aguirre, who disappeared on March 24, meaning no known victims were killed for seven months. Moreover, Corll also is not known to have killed between February 3 and June 4, 1973.[358]

In March 1973, a Mr. and Mrs. Abernathy[359] had reported to Galveston County authorities that they had observed three men carrying and burying a "long, wrapped bundle"[360] at Galveston Beach. The couple identified two of the men as Corll and Henley. The third individual had long, blond hair—like Brooks. As the couple watched the trio, one of the men (whom they later identified as Henley) advanced upon their car with such a menacing expression that the couple felt compelled to drive away.[348] Two women had also observed three men digging at the beach in May 1973—one of whom they positively identified as Brooks. However, police were again unwilling to extend the search.[361]

A Polaroid image depicting a likely unknown victim of Corll. This image was taken in 1972 or 1973.

In February 2012, a picture was released to the news media of a likely unknown victim of Corll.[362] The color Polaroid image had been found in the personal possessions of Henley, which had been stored by his family since his arrest in 1973. The image depicts a blond-haired teenage youth in handcuffs, strapped to a device upon Corll's floor, alongside a toolbox known to contain various instruments Corll used to torture his victims. The individual depicted has been ruled out by the Harris County Medical Examiner as being any of Corll's known victims, including his one remaining known unidentified victim. Henley himself has stated that the picture must have been taken after he had acquired a Polaroid camera in 1972—although he is adamant that he has no idea who this boy is.[n 22] Given that Henley became acquainted with Corll in 1972, it is likely this boy would have been killed in 1972 or 1973.[364]

Outstanding missing persons cases

[edit]

The January 14, 1973, disappearance of 16-year-old Norman Lamar Prater has been tentatively linked to Corll. Prater was last seen by his mother in Dallas in the company of an adult male and two teenage youths with shoulder-length hair; he had previously lived in the same neighborhood as most of Corll's known victims and had attended the same high school as Henley between 1970 and 1971. Prater is known to have continued to visit his father in Houston during weekends after he moved with his mother to Dallas. However, no firm evidence exists to link Prater's disappearance to Corll and his accomplices.[365]

A further teenager, 16-year-old Rodney Harris, is also speculated to be a victim of Dean Corll. Harris—a Spring Woods High School student—had disappeared from Spring Branch on February 21, 1973, less than three weeks after victim Joseph Lyles. He was last seen alive climbing into a sedan close to his family's English Oaks apartment. As with Prater, DNA analysis has excluded Harris as being the sole unidentified victim of Corll.[366]

Contemporary investigative records indicate a teenager named John Green—missing since December 8, 1972—may also have been a victim of Corll, although no contemporary missing persons report of this individual has been located.[367]

Potential association with a national sex ring

[edit]

During a routine investigation in February 1975, the HPD discovered a large cache of pornographic pictures and films depicting boys as young as eight, most of whom were from the Heights. Of the sixteen individuals depicted within the films and photos, eleven of the individuals appeared to be among Corll's known victims who had been identified by this date;[368] other individuals in the cache were underage at the time the images and films had been taken, but had reached the legal age of consent by the time of the discoveries and their questioning by authorities, indicating the material had been accrued over many years.[369]

The discovery raised the disturbing possibility that the statements Corll had given to both Henley and Brooks that he was associated with a Dallas-based organization which "bought and sold boys"[310] may indeed have held a degree of truth.[370] The discovery of the material in Houston in 1975 subsequently led to the arrest of five individuals in Santa Clara, California, including the owner of the warehouse where the cache had been stored, Roy Ames, a known producer of child pornography, whose name police had found on a card in Corll's wallet.[368][371] No direct link in these arrests to Corll was proven, as the HPD declined to pursue any possible link to the killings, stating they felt Corll's victims' families had "suffered enough."[368]

On August 15, 1973, just two days after investigators had uncovered the final bodies initially linked to the Houston Mass Murders, investigators in Dallas uncovered a nationwide homosexual procurement ring operated by John David Norman. This police raid seized a card filing system containing up to 10,000 names of individuals across the United States ascribed to this network and the personal details of numerous teenage boys exploited by this sex trafficking ring.[372]

There is still no conclusive evidence to suggest that Corll had ever solicited any of his victims in this manner, not only because the HPD chose not to pursue this potential possibility, but also because neither Brooks nor Henley ever mentioned having met any individuals from the "organization" Corll had claimed he was involved with.[n 23] In addition, neither mentioned having seen any of the victims either filmed, photographed, or released from the devices Corll restrained his victims to until after their rape, torture, and murder. The arrests in Santa Clara do, however, suggest possible validity in Brooks's statements to police that Corll had informed him that his earliest murder victims had been buried in California.[281]

Media

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Film

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  • A film loosely inspired by the Houston Mass Murders, Freak Out, was released in 2003. The film was directed by Brad Jones, who also starred as Corll. This film largely focuses upon the last night of Corll's life, prior to Henley shooting him and contacting authorities.[374] The film has received mostly mixed to positive reviews.[375]
  • Production of a film directly based upon the Houston Mass Murders, In a Madman's World, finished in 2014.[376] Directed by Josh Vargas, the film is directly based upon Henley's life before, during, and immediately after his involvement with Corll and Brooks. Limited edition copies of the film were released in 2017.[377]

Bibliography

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  • Christian, Kimberly (2015). Horror in the Heights: The True Story of The Houston Mass Murders. CreateSpace. ISBN 978-1-515-19072-1.
  • Gibson, Barbara (2023). Houston Mass Murders 1973: A True Crime Narrative. Independent. ISBN 979-8-882-66863-0.
  • Gurwell, John K. (1974). Mass Murder in Houston. Cordovan Press.
  • Hanna, David (1975). Harvest of Horror: Mass Murder in Houston. Belmont Tower.
  • Jessel, David, ed. (1991). "Murder Casebook, Investigations into the Ultimate Crime – The Candy Man". Murder Casebook (102). Marshall Cavendish. ISBN 978-0-748-53511-8.
  • Olsen, Jack (1974). The Man with the Candy: The Story of the Houston Mass Murders. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-1283-0.
  • Olsen, Lise (2025). The Scientist and the Serial Killer: The Search for Houston's Lost Boys. Random House Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-593-59568-8.
  • Ramsland, Katherine (2014). Dean Corll, Elmer Wayne Henley & David Brooks: The Game of Boys. Grinning Man Press. ISBN 978-0-993-82320-6.
  • Ramsland, Katherine; Ullman, Tracy (2024). The Serial Killer's Apprentice: The True Story of How Houston's Deadliest Murderer Turned a Kid Into a Killing Machine. Penzler Publishers. ISBN 978-1-613-16495-2.
  • Rosewood, Jack (2015). Dean Corll: The True Story of The Houston Mass Murders. CreateSpace. ISBN 978-1-517-48500-9.
  • Williams, Paul (1994). "The Pied Piper". Real-Life Crimes. No. 130. Eaglemoss Publications Ltd. ISBN 978-1-858-75022-4.
  • Wilson, Colin, ed. (1999). "Murder in Mind – Dean Corll". Murder in Mind (80). Marshall Cavendish. ISSN 1364-5803.

Television

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  • A 1982 documentary, The Killing of America, features a section devoted to the Houston Mass Murders.[378]
  • FactualTV has screened a documentary focusing upon the murders committed by Corll and his accomplices. Dr. Sharon Derrick is among those interviewed for the documentary.[379]
  • Investigation Discovery has broadcast a documentary focusing upon the Houston Mass Murders within their documentary series, Most Evil. This documentary, entitled Manipulators, features an interview with Henley conducted by a former forensic psychologist named Kris Mohandie.[380]
  • The crime thriller series Mindhunter has broadcast an episode mentioning the Houston Mass Murders. This episode was first broadcast on August 16, 2019.[381]
  • Houston-based news channel KPRC-TV has broadcast an episode focusing upon the Houston Mass Murders as part of their crime series The Evidence Room. Hosted by investigative reporter Robert Arnold, this 28-minute episode, titled The Candy Man's Henchmen, was first broadcast in February 2023.[382]
  • The Serial Killer's Apprentice. Commissioned by Investigation Discovery, this two-hour documentary was first broadcast on August 17, 2025, and contains audio recordings of Henley's interviews with forensic psychologist Katherine Ramsland.[383]

Podcast

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  • The Clown and the Candyman (2020–2021). An eight-part podcast series narrated by Jacqueline Bynon, investigating the murders committed by Dean Corll and John Wayne Gacy, their respective potential links to a nationwide sex trafficking network, and the ongoing efforts to identify their victims.[384]

See also

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Notes

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References

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Cited works and further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Dean Arnold Corll (December 24, 1939 – August 8, 1973) was an American serial killer and rapist active in Houston, Texas, who abducted, sexually assaulted, tortured, and murdered at least 28 teenage boys and young men between 1970 and 1973, in crimes known as the Houston Mass Murders. Dubbed the "Candy Man" due to his family's ownership of a candy company where he once worked, Corll targeted vulnerable youths from local neighborhoods, often luring them with offers of parties, drugs, or money. Corll's early life was marked by family instability, including his parents' divorce in 1946 and subsequent remarriages, after which the family relocated to in 1950. He graduated from high school in 1958 and briefly served in the U.S. Army from 1964 to 1965 before returning to civilian life as an . By 1970, Corll had enlisted two teenage accomplices—, whom he met that year, and , introduced through Brooks shortly after—to aid in procuring victims, promising them cash and gifts in exchange for their participation. The murders involved extreme sadism, with victims bound, beaten, sexually assaulted over extended periods—sometimes days—and ultimately strangled or shot before their bodies were buried in locations such as a rented boat shed on Lake , a on the Bolivar Peninsula, and Corll's residence. The spree ended on August 8, 1973, when Henley fatally shot Corll during an altercation at his Pasadena home after Corll threatened him and a female friend; Henley then confessed to authorities, leading to the recovery of 27 bodies initially and subsequent identifications that raised the confirmed toll. Brooks and Henley were convicted of multiple murders, with Henley receiving six life sentences and Brooks six life sentences, though efforts continue to identify potential additional victims.

Early life

Family background and childhood

Dean Arnold Corll was born on December 24, 1939, in Fort Wayne, Indiana, the first of two sons born to a father who worked as an electrician and a mother who would later become a candy company entrepreneur. His parents' marriage was unstable, marked by frequent arguments, and they divorced when Corll was six years old in 1946. Following the divorce, Corll primarily lived with his mother, who divorced and remarried multiple times, while his father also remarried. In 1950, at age 11, the family relocated to , , where his parents briefly reconciled and remarried. The reconciliation proved short-lived; by 1953, when Corll was 14, his parents separated again, and his mother began a new relationship. Throughout his childhood, Corll was raised at various points by his mother and , as well as spending time with his biological father and younger brother. No records indicate experiences of , academic difficulties, or notable physical or psychological problems during this period.

Relocation to Houston and adolescence

In 1950, at the age of 11, Dean Corll moved with his family from to , , following his parents' remarriage after an earlier in 1946. His father, Arnold Corll, worked as an electrician in Pasadena, a of , while his mother, Mary, began building her entrepreneurial ventures, including early candy-making efforts. The family briefly reconciled but separated again shortly after the move, leaving Corll primarily in the care of his mother and younger brother, Stanley. During his early adolescence in , Corll was diagnosed with a , which excused him from and led him to focus on ; he played the in his high school band and maintained average grades as a neat and well-behaved student. Described by acquaintances as polite, obedient, and affectionate—particularly toward children—he graduated from Vidor High School (near , where the family temporarily resided) in 1958. Corll exhibited a shy demeanor with few close friends, often keeping to himself outside of family and school activities. In 1960, the family relocated briefly to , , but returned to two years later in , settling in the neighborhood to establish the Corll Candy Company on West 22nd Street. At age 22, Corll joined his mother in operating the business, working on the assembly line and earning a reputation as the "pleasant, smiling " for handing out free treats to neighborhood children and inviting them to play pool in the back room. He also gave rides on his and organized picnics in a customized van, fostering a friendly image among local youths. This period marked the height of his involvement in the family enterprise before his U.S. Army enlistment in 1964.

U.S. Army service

In August 1964, at the age of 24, Dean Corll was drafted into the . He underwent training at Fort Hood, , where he attended radio repair school and maintained an exemplary record with no disciplinary issues. Corll served for approximately 10 months, demonstrating competence in his technical training. During this period, he reportedly adapted well to military life, focusing on his assigned duties in electronics repair. In June 1965, Corll received an honorable hardship discharge after applying on the grounds that his mother required his assistance to manage the family's struggling candy business in . This early release allowed him to return home and resume involvement in the Corll Candy Company operations.

Professional life

Corll Candy Company operations

The Corll Candy Company was established in 1962 by Mary Corll, Dean Corll's mother, in the neighborhood of , following the family's relocation there to capitalize on local market opportunities for production. Initially operating as a small-scale family enterprise, the business specialized in handmade candies such as , pralines, and chewies, which were produced on-site and sold primarily to local retailers and customers in the area. Dean Corll, who had previously worked at a plant after high school, left that job to join the company full-time, assuming the role of and overseeing daily production tasks, including running the assembly line and packaging operations. Mary managed overall ownership and business decisions. The company's first location was on West 22nd Street, near several elementary schools, which facilitated direct interaction with neighborhood children; Dean frequently distributed free samples of to them, earning him the local nickname "." Operations at the Corll Candy Company emphasized artisanal production in a modest factory setting, with equipment for mixing, molding, and wrapping candies handled by a small team of family members and occasional employees. A notable feature was a back room equipped with a pool table, which served as a casual gathering spot for young boys from the neighborhood, many of whom were drawn by the free candy and friendly atmosphere. The business thrived modestly during its peak in the mid-1960s, benefiting from the post-World War II economic growth in Houston's suburban areas, but faced challenges typical of small confectioners, including competition from larger manufacturers. The company ceased operations in 1968 when Mary Corll, following her divorce from stepfather Jake West and influenced by advice from psychics, sold the business and relocated the family to . This closure marked the end of Dean's direct involvement in the candy trade, after which he transitioned to other employment while remaining in .

Post-military employment

Upon his discharge from the U.S. Army in 1965 due to hardship reasons, Dean Corll returned to to assist his mother, Mary, in operating the family's candy manufacturing business, known as Corll Candy Company, which produced confections such as , pralines, and chewies. He took on responsibilities including managing the assembly line and interacting with local children who visited the factory, often giving away free samples, which earned him the local nickname "." The business operated out of a facility in 's Heights neighborhood, where Corll lived and worked full-time until its closure in 1968, prompted by his mother's decision to relocate to with her new husband. Following the shutdown of the candy factory, Corll remained in and transitioned into the electrical trade, beginning training as an shortly after 1968. By the early 1970s, he was employed as a full-time at Houston Lighting and Power Company (now ), a role he held until his death in 1973 at age 33. This position involved standard electrical work in the utility sector, allowing him to maintain a stable, unassuming professional life in Pasadena, a suburb, while residing in a series of modest apartments.

Criminal partnerships

Relationship with David Brooks

David Owen Brooks first encountered Dean Corll in the mid-1960s when Brooks was approximately 10 or 11 years old, at the Corll Candy Company factory located across from his elementary school in Houston's Heights neighborhood. Corll, then in his mid-20s and operating the family candy business, befriended the young Brooks, whose parents had recently divorced, positioning himself as a supportive father figure who offered emotional guidance, financial assistance, and a sense of belonging amid Brooks's unstable home life. This initial connection evolved into a deeper personal relationship, with Brooks later recalling in his confessions that he met Corll during his sixth-grade year and began engaging in homosexual activities with him shortly thereafter. By 1970, as Brooks entered his mid-teens, the relationship took a darker turn. In mid-December of that year, Brooks witnessed Corll sexually assaulting two teenage boys at Corll's apartment on Yorktown Street in , an event that marked Brooks's unwilling entry into Corll's criminal activities. Corll subsequently recruited Brooks as an accomplice, promising him rewards such as $200 per victim and material incentives, including a green automobile, in exchange for helping to lure other boys under the pretense of parties or outings. Brooks, who intermittently lived with Corll during this period, became emotionally dependent on him and assumed a passive yet participatory role, assisting in the abduction, restraint, and disposal of victims while Corll committed the rapes and murders. Brooks's involvement deepened when he introduced his friend Jr. to Corll around 1971, expanding the group's operations and drawing Henley into the fold as a second accomplice. Throughout the early , Brooks was present at the majority of the killings—estimated at 25 to 30 in total—primarily at Corll's residences or a rented storage shed, where he helped bury bodies at sites including a boat stall in and near Sam Rayburn Lake. In his August 1973 confessions to police following Corll's death, Brooks detailed his complicity, admitting to aiding in specific murders such as those of William Ray Lawrence in and earlier victims like Ruben Haney and brothers James Glass and Danny Yates in December 1970. Brooks's attorney later described Corll's hold over him as total manipulation, stating, "Dean had David exactly where he wanted him." The partnership ended with Corll's fatal shooting by Henley on August 8, 1973, after which Brooks cooperated with authorities, leading to his 1975 conviction for one count of and sentences totaling 99 years in prison, though he was eligible for parole multiple times before his death in 2020.

Recruitment and role of Elmer Wayne Henley

Jr., born on May 9, 1956, first encountered Dean Corll in 1971 at the age of 15, introduced through their mutual acquaintance David Brooks, who was Henley's neighbor and former classmate in the neighborhood. Coming from a troubled background marked by an abusive, alcoholic father and financial hardship, Henley was working part-time at a gas station to support his household when Corll, then 31 and employed at his family's candy company, began visiting the Henley home regularly and treating the teenager with unusual kindness, positioning himself as a . Corll initially drew Henley into minor criminal activities, such as petty thefts, before escalating to sexual involvement; Henley later admitted in his confession to receiving small payments of $5 to $10 for participating in sodomy with Corll. By 1971, facing his own financial needs as a high school dropout, Henley accepted Corll's offer of $200 per boy he could recruit, under the false pretense that the youths were being supplied to a homosexual pornography ring or slave trafficking operation in California—claims Corll fabricated to secure Henley's cooperation without revealing the true lethal intent. This recruitment mirrored Corll's earlier manipulation of Brooks in 1970 but positioned Henley as a more active participant due to his vulnerability and the substantial monetary incentive, which was significant in the early 1970s economy. Henley's role in the ensuing crimes, spanning from 1971 to 1973, involved procuring at least a dozen victims, primarily teenage boys from the area, many of whom were his friends or acquaintances hitchhiking . He lured them with promises of parties, beer, marijuana, or rides, often picking them up in Corll's vehicle and delivering them to one of Corll's residences in or Pasadena. Once at the locations, Henley assisted in subduing the victims—restraining them with , forcing some to write farewell letters home to delay searches, and participating in the sexual assaults and that preceded the murders, which Corll typically executed by strangulation, shooting, or other means. His first confirmed involvement was in the abduction and killing of 17-year-old Billy Baulch on May 23, , followed by others including his close friend Mark Scott in 1972, whom he personally shot at Corll's direction. Beyond the abductions, Henley helped dispose of the bodies, burying many in shallow graves at sites such as a boat shed on Lake Sam Rayburn, a beach on High Island, and Corll's rented storage unit, contributing to the concealment of at least 27 victims over the three-year period. In his August 1973 confession to police, Henley detailed the operations, stating that Corll "would screw all of them and sometimes suck them and make them suck him" before killing, underscoring his firsthand participation in the horrors, though he claimed initial ignorance of the murders until after his first delivery. Convicted in 1974 of six counts of murder for his direct role, Henley received six concurrent life sentences, having confessed to involvement in more but receiving leniency for leading authorities to the burial sites.

Methods and timeline of murders

Initial abductions and techniques

Corll's escalated in 1970 when he enlisted the help of his teenage accomplice David Brooks, whom he had groomed since 1967 by providing him with gifts, money, and sexual favors. Brooks, then 15, began procuring young boys for Corll by offering them rides, parties, drugs, alcohol, or candy from Corll's family business, exploiting the trust of vulnerable teens from low-income neighborhoods like the Heights. The first known abduction occurred in September 1970, when Corll picked up 18-year-old college student Jeffrey Alan Konen, who was from Austin to . Corll drove Konen to his apartment at 1855 Columbia Street, where he handcuffed the victim to a plywood board rigged with restraints, raped and tortured him over several hours, then strangled him to death. Brooks assisted in disposing of the body by burying it near Lake Sam Rayburn, approximately 85 miles northeast of . In December 1970, Brooks lured two more boys, 14-year-old James Glass and 15-year-old Danny Yates, to Corll's home under the pretense of a party; the boys were abducted from the streets of . Once inside, Corll bound them to the same torture apparatus—a seven-foot by three-foot board with handcuff attachments—and subjected them to prolonged and sadistic , including the insertion of rods into their urethras and needles into their genitals, before killing them by strangulation. Their bodies were also interred at Lake . Corll's techniques relied on psychological manipulation and to control victims, often starting with offers of innocuous incentives to lower defenses. Inside his residences, he maintained a dedicated "torture room" lined with plastic sheeting, equipped with a of sexual devices, ropes, and , where abductees were immobilized face-down on the board for days of escalating before execution, typically by asphyxiation to avoid noise. Brooks received $200 per successful , incentivizing his repeated involvement in these early crimes.

Expansion of operations

As Corll's partnership with David Brooks solidified in the late 1960s, the scope of their abductions and murders began to expand in early 1972 with the recruitment of 15-year-old Jr., a mutual acquaintance of Brooks from Pasadena High School. Henley was initially enticed by offers of cash—typically $200 per victim—and access to drugs and alcohol, leading him to actively participate in luring teenage boys, often his own friends or acquaintances from vulnerable, low-income areas of . With two accomplices now assisting in procurement, the frequency and efficiency of the crimes surged; whereas Corll and Brooks had committed an estimated 8 to 10 murders between and early 1972, the addition of Henley facilitated at least 18 more killings over the subsequent 17 months, primarily between March 1972 and July 1973. The trio targeted boys aged 13 to 20, using Corll's candy business reputation and promises of parties or rides to isolate victims, transporting them in Corll's Ford Econoline van to one of his residences for prolonged sessions involving restraints, , and . To accommodate the rising body count, disposal methods evolved beyond initial shallow graves near Corll's properties, expanding to multiple remote sites around . In 1973, the group stored 17 victims in a rented boat shed, while others were buried at Lake Sam Rayburn and scattered along High Island Beach on the Gulf Coast, complicating early detection by authorities. This logistical growth underscored the operation's increasing audacity, evading police scrutiny despite missing persons reports from the Houston area.

Primary locations used

Dean Corll primarily conducted the abductions, assaults, and murders of his victims at various residences in the area, targeting teenage boys from neighborhoods like the . Early crimes often occurred at his apartment on Yorktown Street, where he victims with promises of parties or rides before subjecting them to prolonged and . Later, after moving to the Place One Apartments on Mangum Road in 1971, Corll continued these acts there, including the killings of brothers and Jerry Waldrop. By 1973, he shifted operations to a rented home in Pasadena at 905 North 19th Street, where he murdered at least eight victims during the summer months. For body disposal, Corll and his accomplices relied on three key sites to bury the remains, concealing 28 confirmed victims across these locations. The primary site was a rented shed at Stall 11 in the Southwest Boat Storage facility on Silver Bell Street in , where police uncovered 17 bodies in August 1973 shortly after Corll's death; the shed's remote and secure nature allowed for shallow graves layered with lime to accelerate . An additional five bodies were buried in a wooded area near Lake in , approximately 100 miles northeast of , chosen for its isolation and accessibility for quick transport. The remaining six victims were interred on High Island Beach, about 80 miles east of along the Gulf Coast, where sandy soil and tidal erosion later exposed some remains in 1983. These disposal methods reflected Corll's efforts to delay discovery while minimizing physical labor.

Confrontation and death

Events leading to August 8, 1973

On the evening of August 7, 1973, Jr., then 17, picked up his friends 19-year-old Timothy Kerley and 15-year-old Rhonda Williams from her home in Houston's Heights neighborhood, where she had been enduring from her father. Henley, who had known Williams since childhood and viewed her as a close friend, intended to help her escape her troubled living situation by taking her to Dean Corll's residence at 2020 Lamar Drive in , for the night. Upon arrival, the group was joined by Corll, who provided them with drugs including marijuana, leading to a casual evening of , moonshine or , and huffing from a bag, activities that left them intoxicated and eventually passing out. Corll, who typically targeted young males for his crimes and had grown increasingly volatile in his operations, became furious upon discovering Williams—a female—in his house, viewing her presence as a disruption to his routine. While the group slept, Corll bound all three with nylon cord, , and , securing Kerley and Williams to a torture board in one of the bedrooms and tying Henley nearby, with plans to subject them to the same sexual and murder he had inflicted on prior victims. In the early hours of August 8, 1973, around 3:00 a.m., as Kerley and Williams awoke to find themselves restrained and began pleading for their lives, Henley—partially untied by Corll after promising compliance—faced a dire situation. Corll, armed with a , demanded that Henley participate by raping and killing Williams to "prove his loyalty," while Corll intended to and Kerley himself. Henley, who had assisted Corll in at least six previous but had reportedly begun to question the escalating brutality, seized the opportunity when Corll momentarily turned his attention, grabbing the gun from a and firing six shots into Corll's head and upper body, killing him instantly.

Final assault and Corll's killing

In the aftermath of the shooting around 3:00 a.m., Henley untied Kerley and Williams. He then telephoned his mother, confessing, "Mama, I killed Dean," before calling Pasadena police to report the incident and his involvement in the broader crimes. Corll's body was found nude on the floor of the , surrounded by the apparatus and evidence of the aborted assaults, marking the abrupt end to his three-year reign of terror.

Immediate aftermath and confessions

Henley's police contact

On the morning of August 8, 1973, approximately 8:15 a.m., 17-year-old telephoned the from Dean Corll's residence at 2020 Lamar Drive in , to report that he had shot and killed a man in . Henley stated that the shooting occurred after Corll had attempted to handcuff and assault him along with two friends—15-year-old Rhonda Williams and 19-year-old Timothy Kerley—following a late-night gathering involving the inhalation of spray paint fumes. The call initiated what Pasadena police later described as a routine that rapidly escalated into the unraveling of one of the most prolific serial murder cases in U.S. history. Pasadena police officers, including Patrolman J. B. Jamison, responded immediately to the address and upon arrival found Corll's naked body in the hallway, having suffered multiple gunshot wounds to the head and torso from a .22-caliber pistol. Henley, who was also partially undressed and appeared distressed, was detained at the scene along with the two teenagers present, who corroborated his account of the night's events. Detective David Mullican, one of the responding investigators, noted that the incident initially seemed like an isolated domestic shooting, but Henley's subsequent statements hinted at deeper criminal involvement. As officers secured the residence, which contained evidence of bondage and including a "torture board" equipped with restraints, Henley began providing preliminary details about his relationship with Corll, setting the stage for his full confession later that day. Pasadena Police Sergeant James Anderson later reflected that the killings orchestrated by Corll would have continued indefinitely without Henley's intervention and police contact.

Initial confessions and arrests

On August 8, 1973, shortly after fatally shooting at his residence in , 17-year-old Jr. contacted the Pasadena Police Department to confess. Henley informed authorities that he had killed Corll during an altercation involving two teenagers he had brought to the home, and he admitted his own involvement in multiple prior murders orchestrated by Corll. He was immediately arrested on charges of murdering Corll and taken into custody, where he received a before providing a detailed voluntary written statement describing a three-year pattern of luring teenage boys to Corll's homes for , , and killing. In his initial confession, Henley recounted how he and another accomplice, , had helped Corll abduct at least 27 victims since 1970, often paying the boys small sums or offering rides and alcohol as lures, before binding, abusing, and burying them at various sites around . Henley led investigators to a boat storage shed on Silver Bell Street in that same day, where eight bodies were quickly recovered, marking the start of a multi-site excavation that uncovered remains across Harris County. His statements implicated Brooks directly, prompting police to seek him out for questioning. The following day, August 9, 1973, 18-year-old David Owen Brooks voluntarily appeared at the Houston Police Department with his father after learning of Henley's confession and Corll's death. Brooks provided an initial oral statement admitting knowledge of Corll's killings but initially downplaying his own role; however, after further interrogation, he delivered two written confessions on August 10 detailing his presence at approximately 25 to 30 murders, including assisting in luring victims, restraining them, and burying bodies at locations such as a boat stall, Lake Sam Rayburn, and High Island beach. Brooks was arrested shortly thereafter on murder charges, with his statements corroborating Henley's account and aiding in the recovery of additional victims' remains. Both Henley and Brooks faced initial charges related to the homicides, setting the stage for grand jury indictments in the ensuing weeks.

Investigation and victim recovery

Search efforts and discoveries

Following Elmer Wayne Henley's confession on August 8, 1973, Houston police immediately launched an extensive search for the burial sites of the victims, guided by Henley and accomplice . The initial focus was on a rented storage at 2020 Silver Bell Street in , where Corll had stored his and used the space for some of the murders and burials. On , 1973, officers arrived at the shed and began digging with shovels and backhoes, uncovering eight bodies buried in shallow graves under a thin layer of lime to accelerate decomposition. The following day, August 9, excavations continued, revealing nine more bodies in the same location, bringing the total from the shed to 17. The remains, primarily of teenage boys, were bound with cord and showed signs of , including restraints and . Police used trusties and to accelerate the grim work amid sweltering heat, with the shed's discovery shocking investigators due to the sheer number concentrated in one site. Henley and Brooks then directed authorities to two additional remote sites. Near Lake Sam Rayburn in , approximately 100 miles northeast of , search teams recovered four bodies on August 9 and 10, 1973, buried in a wooded area. Further east, at High Island Beach along the Gulf Coast about 80 miles from , six more bodies were exhumed over the next several days from sandy dunes, with some partially exposed by erosion. These recoveries, involving coordinated efforts from , Pasadena, and , utilized maps provided by the accomplices and ground-penetrating searches to locate the makeshift graves. By August 13, 1973, a total of 27 bodies had been recovered across the three locations, confirming the scale of the crimes and leading to the case being dubbed the "Houston Mass Murders." Initial identifications were made through dental records, clothing, and family reports of missing youths, with four victims positively matched within the first three days. The discoveries prompted widespread media coverage and public horror, as the victims were local teenagers from 's working-class neighborhoods. Autopsies revealed that most had been shot, strangled, or bludgeoned, with bodies often dismembered or wrapped in plastic before burial.

Forensic analysis at the time

Following the confessions of Jr. on August 8, 1973, the Harris County 's Office, under Chief Dr. Joseph A. Jachimczyk, conducted autopsies on the 27 bodies recovered from burial sites linked to Dean Corll. These examinations were performed in a rapid, disaster-response mode due to the volume of remains, many of which were in advanced states of from shallow graves or exposure. The bodies, primarily adolescent males aged 13 to 20, were often found wrapped in sheeting, , or tied with cords, indicating premeditated disposal efforts. Autopsy findings consistently revealed causes of death as by either close-range wounds from a .22-caliber or manual/asphyxial . Several cases documented .22-caliber wounds to the , with projectiles recovered from tissue; bodies often weighed around 70 pounds and showed skeletal elements in extremities due to estimated at up to one year prior. Other victims showed ligature marks, gags made from towels or tape, and evidence of prolonged restraint, such as adhesive residues on the face and wrists, corroborating accounts of . Internal examinations often noted and petechial hemorrhages consistent with in non-ballistic deaths, though advanced limited toxicological or detailed soft-tissue analysis in many instances. Identification efforts relied on traditional forensic techniques available in 1973, including dental comparisons, radiographic of bones and teeth, and examination of personal effects like or jewelry. Fingerprints were attempted where preservation allowed, but frequently rendered them unusable. Many of the victims were identified through these methods within months, cross-referenced with missing persons reports from Houston-area families; however, several cases required longer investigations, with identifications occurring over the following decades—the most recent in 2014. Subsequent advancements in forensics have led to additional identifications in the decades following, though one victim remains unidentified as of 2025. No was employed, as the technology did not exist, highlighting the era's reliance on visual and comparative . Challenges in the 1973 analysis included the sheer scale of the operation—over two dozen autopsies in days—leading to potential oversights in documentation, as well as the bodies' poor condition from lime treatment in some graves to accelerate decay. Mixed remains in storage and initial confusion over burial sites, based on Henley's and David Brooks' statements, complicated chain-of-custody. Despite these limitations, the forensic work provided critical evidence for the prosecutions, establishing the pattern of , , and execution-style killings.

Indictments of accomplices

Following the confessions of Jr. and to their involvement in the s orchestrated by Dean Corll, a Harris convened in August to review the evidence. On August 14, , the issued initial s against both accomplices for specific s linked to the killings of at least 27 teenage boys. Henley, then 17, was indicted on two counts of : one for the shooting death of Charles C. Cobble, 17, and another for the strangulation death of Marty Ray Jones, 18. Brooks, then 18, was jointly indicted with Henley on one count for the of William Ray Lawrence, 15. Each carried a bond of $100,000. Subsequent proceedings expanded the charges based on detailed confessions and recovered evidence, leading to broader indictments under the Penal Code of 1925 (Articles 1256 and 1257(b)) for with malice. Henley was ultimately indicted on six counts of for his direct participation in the killings, including acts of strangulation and , as he had admitted to luring victims, assisting in their , and disposing of bodies alongside Corll and Brooks. These indictments reflected Henley's role in at least six specific deaths between 1972 and 1973, though his confessions implicated him in up to 27. Brooks faced a single formal for with malice in the strangulation death of William Ray Lawrence, where he was charged as a principal or accomplice, having aided Corll and Henley by encouraging the act and helping to bury the body. Although Brooks confessed to participating in multiple abductions and s starting from —often by driving victims to Corll's residences and assisting in restraints—the grand jury pursued only one count against him, citing his lesser direct involvement in the fatal acts compared to Henley. The indictments highlighted the accomplices' roles in a three-year pattern of abductions, sexual assaults, and homicides, with both Henley and Brooks described in court documents as having procured victims from Houston's Heights neighborhood under Corll's influence. No additional accomplices were charged, and the proceedings emphasized the evidentiary challenges posed by the decomposed remains recovered from burial sites. These charges set the stage for separate trials in 1974 and 1975, respectively.

Henley's trial and conviction

Henley's first trial began on July 1, 1974, in , , following a granted due to extensive pretrial publicity in . He was charged with six counts of with malice for the killings of specific victims in which he had confessed to participating: Mark Scott, Jerry Waldrop, James Glass, Danny Yates, Homer Garcia, and John Bailey. During the proceedings, Henley testified in his own defense, claiming he acted under duress from Corll, who had threatened his life and that of his family if he refused to participate. The trial lasted approximately two weeks, with prosecutors presenting evidence from Henley's confessions and witness testimonies linking him to the abductions and assaults. On July 16, 1974, after deliberating for just 90 minutes, the found Henley guilty on all six s of murder with malice. At the penalty phase, the same him to 99 years in for each , with the terms to be served consecutively, resulting in a total of 594 years. Henley immediately appealed the convictions, arguing procedural errors including the denial of his pretrial motion for another without an evidentiary hearing. In December 1978, the overturned the convictions, ruling that the trial court had erred by denying the venue motion without a hearing, as required to assess the impact of prejudicial publicity. A retrial was ordered, this time in Corpus Christi, where another had been granted. The second trial commenced in May 1979, with similar evidence presented, including Henley's prior confessions and forensic links to the victims. Henley again claimed by Corll but was unable to sway the . On June 28, 1979, the jury convicted Henley on all six counts after a brief deliberation. In the sentencing phase, the jury recommended six concurrent life sentences, which the imposed, making Henley eligible for consideration after serving 40 years on each count. Henley appealed the second convictions as well, but the upheld them in 1982. He remains incarcerated at the Barry B. Telford Unit in , and has been denied multiple times, most recently in 2025.

Brooks' trial and conviction

David Owen Brooks, Dean Corll's first teenage accomplice, was indicted by a on four counts of murder in connection with the Houston Mass Murders, but prosecutors elected to try him separately from and initially focused on a single charge: the July 1973 strangulation of 15-year-old William Ray Lawrence. The trial commenced in in February 1975, with Brooks, then 20 years old, pleading not guilty and maintaining that he had not directly participated in any killings but had been coerced by Corll through threats and a homosexual relationship. Key evidence presented included Brooks' initial oral confession to police on August 10, 1973—later deemed admissible after a suppression hearing—as well as two written statements detailing his presence during Lawrence's abduction, torture, and murder at Corll's Pasadena residence, and his assistance in burying the body near Lake Sam Rayburn. Prosecutors also introduced testimony about Brooks' knowledge of and participation in approximately 25 to 30 other murders, including luring victims and helping with burials, to establish his role as a principal under Texas Penal Code Article 1256 (1925). The defense argued for a charge on accessory liability rather than principal, but the judge refused, instructing the jury solely on the principal theory; Brooks did not testify in his own defense. On March 5, 1975, after deliberating for less than two hours, the found Brooks guilty of with malice. He was immediately sentenced to in the Texas Department of Corrections, avoiding the death penalty due to the absence of specifications under state law at the time. Brooks appealed the conviction in 1977, raising issues including insufficient evidence, improper admission of extraneous offenses, and erroneous jury instructions, but the affirmed the verdict on May 16, 1979, upholding both the conviction and sentence. The remaining three indictments against him were never pursued.

Victims

Confirmed victims by year

The confirmed victims of Dean Corll, totaling 28 teenage boys and young men (27 identified and 1 unidentified), were abducted, tortured, and murdered between 1970 and 1973 in the area, often lured through acquaintances or offers of rides and from Corll's . The killings escalated over time, with remains primarily recovered from burial sites at a boat shed in , High Island Beach, and following confessions from accomplices Jr. and . In 1970, Corll claimed his first three confirmed victims. Jeffrey Alan Konen, an 18-year-old University of student, was from Austin to on when he was abducted; his body was later found strangled and buried on High Island Beach. On December 13, 14-year-old brothers and Danny Yates were lured from a neighborhood swimming pool under the pretense of a party and killed at Corll's residence. The murders intensified in 1971, with six confirmed identified victims. On January 30, brothers Donald Waldrop (15) and Jerry Waldrop (13) vanished after stopping by Corll's candy factory. Randell Harvey (15) disappeared on March 9 while riding his bicycle; David Hilligiest (14) and Gregory Malley Winkle (16) were abducted together on May 29 after leaving a band practice; and Ruben Watson Haney (17) went missing on August 17 after accepting a ride. By 1972, nine confirmed identified victims were recorded, reflecting Corll's growing reliance on accomplices to procure boys from the neighborhood (with the unidentified victim estimated for this period). Mark Scott (17), a friend of Brooks, was forced to write a letter home before his April 20 murder. On May 21, 16-year-old Johnny Delome and 17-year-old Billy Baulch Jr. (brother of a later victim) were killed after being invited to Corll's home. Other examples include 18-year-old Frank Aguirre on March 24 and 19-year-old Richard Kepner on November 12, both hitchhikers. In 1973, the final year of the spree, ten confirmed identified victims were murdered before Henley killed Corll on August 8. William Ray Lawrence (15) disappeared on June 4 after leaving a movie theater; 15-year-old Homer Garcia vanished on July 7 while walking home from a friend's house; Michael Baulch (15), brother of 1972 victim Billy, was abducted on July 19; and 13-year-old James Stanton Dreymala was the last, lured on August 3 with a promise of a beach trip.

Unidentified remains

Among the remains recovered in connection with Dean Corll's crimes, one victim—known as John Houston Doe 1973—remains unidentified as of 2025. His skeletal remains were discovered on August 9, 1973, in a boat shed at the Southwest Boat Storage facility in , just one day after Corll was killed by his accomplice Jr. The victim is estimated to have been aged 15-18 at the time of death, male, of possible White or Hispanic descent, standing between 5 feet 2 inches and 5 feet 7 inches tall, with dark brown hair approximately 7 inches long. He exhibited mild , which may have caused lower or an altered gait. The remains were found clothed in a long-sleeved featuring a red, white, and blue symbol with "USA" text, dark blue pants (size 32 waist by 30 inseam), Catalina brand swim trunks with vertical secured by a belt with a "C" buckle and golden wings, a knotted ankle bracelet, and brown (12 inches high with "NEOLITE" heels). Forensic analysis indicates he had been deceased for at least 12 months, suggesting he disappeared between 1971 and 1972, and his teeth were in good condition with no fillings. This victim, often referred to as "Swimsuit Boy" due to the distinctive trunks, remains the last unidentified among Corll's confirmed victims. Identification efforts have intensified in recent years through advanced forensic techniques, including from bone samples and . The Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences, in collaboration with the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC), has released updated facial reconstructions and clothing details multiple times, most recently in August 2025, to solicit public tips. The case (NamUs UP #4547, NCMEC #1109009) was previously handled by the but transferred to another genetic genealogy provider in January 2025, remaining an open investigation. Additional unidentified skeletal remains linked to Corll's crimes have been stored since the at the Harris County Medical Examiner's Office, including fragments in boxes labeled " Mass Murders" discovered by forensic anthropologist Sharon Derrick in 2006. These include bones associated with items like a bearing a U.S. Marine Corps and the phrase "LA4MF" (possibly "Late for my funeral"), as well as women's , potentially indicating multiple individuals or unrelated cases. While some of these remains have been re-examined and matched to known victims using improved from molars and long bones, others await confirmation through family reference samples, amid challenges like degraded evidence and locating relatives from the era. As of April 2025, efforts detailed in investigative reporting suggest a small number of these fragments may represent additional unidentified victims beyond John Doe, though Corll is confirmed to have murdered at least 28 individuals, with speculation of up to 35.

Recent forensic identifications

In August 2023, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) released a new facial reconstruction of 1973, the last unidentified victim among the 28 confirmed remains attributed to Dean Corll, estimated to be a Caucasian male aged 15-18 at the time of his death in 1973. This reconstruction, created by NCMEC forensic artists in collaboration with the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences, depicted the victim with shoulder-length brown hair and incorporated details such as mild , based on skeletal analysis. Accompanying digital recreations highlighted clothing and accessories found with the remains, including multi-colored Catalina swim trunks, a shirt with a peace symbol, brown , and a leather ankle bracelet, to generate public tips for potential matches. The victim's DNA profile has been entered into the FBI's CODIS database since 2005, with techniques applied more recently to compare against reference samples, though no matches have been confirmed as of 2025. In January 2025, the case was transferred from the to another provider to continue these efforts, reflecting advancements in and database integration for resolutions. The Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences maintains oversight, utilizing re-examined skeletal evidence from the original recovery site in . Investigative reporting in 2025 highlighted broader forensic re-evaluations of Corll's victims, including exhumations and DNA re-testing of previously misidentified or cremated remains, led by forensic anthropologist Dr. Sharon Derrick at the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences. These efforts, detailed in Lise Olsen's book The Scientist and the Serial Killer, have confirmed identities for most of the original unidentified "does" through familial DNA matches, though the final case remains open.

Suspected additional crimes

Unrecovered bodies

Despite initial discoveries of 28 victims' remains following Dean Corll's death in 1973, accomplices and suggested during interrogations and later statements that Corll may have murdered additional young men prior to their involvement, with bodies disposed of in undisclosed locations. , in particular, indicated that Corll operated independently for years before recruiting him in 1972, accounting for six such victims, though no specific details on identities or sites were provided at the time. In response to these claims, , a specializing in locating missing persons, initiated searches in the area starting in 2021, targeting sites such as Corll's former Pasadena residence and boat storage facilities based on Henley's input. Founder Tim Miller estimated that as many as 20 additional victims' remains might still be undiscovered, citing patterns in missing persons reports from the early 1970s that align with Corll's . Henley corresponded with Miller and expressed willingness to assist by providing further details on potential disposal sites, including a possible second storage shed used by Corll. However, these efforts, including ground-penetrating radar scans and excavations at Corll's Lamar Drive property in November 2021, uncovered only animal bones and no human remains, leading search teams to conclude no victims were buried there. Subsequent investigations in areas like High Island and the Sam Rayburn Reservoir have similarly yielded no results, leaving the suspected additional victims' bodies unrecovered and their cases tied to broader missing persons inquiries. As of November 2025, no new recoveries have been reported, and the exact number of unrecovered victims remains unverified. In August 2025, a documentary titled "The Serial Killer's Apprentice" featured Henley's first interview in 50 years, based on over 60 hours of recordings, which may provide further insights into potential additional crimes. Investigators have long suspected that Dean Corll and his accomplices may be responsible for additional murders beyond the 28 confirmed victims, with links drawn to unresolved missing persons cases from the area in the early . Elmer Wayne Henley, Corll's primary accomplice who confessed to participating in the killings, has stated in interviews that the trio abducted and murdered more boys than those whose bodies were recovered, though he provided few specific details on locations or identities due to the volume of crimes committed over three years. These statements have prompted renewed efforts to connect Corll's crimes to lingering missing persons reports, particularly those involving teenage boys who vanished without trace during the peak of the killings from 1970 to 1973. , a nonprofit organization specializing in searches for missing individuals, has led surveys and excavations at potential sites in Pasadena and surrounding areas, motivated by Henley's claims and the pattern of disappearances that matched Corll's of targeting vulnerable youths through offers of rides or jobs. No additional bodies have been found in these searches as of 2021, but founder Tim Miller has emphasized that unresolved cases from the era could still yield matches through forensic advancements like DNA analysis of remains or familial genealogy, estimating up to 20 additional victims. The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) has also contributed by generating forensic facial reconstructions and age-progressed images of unidentified Corll victims, hoping to prompt tips that link them to specific missing persons files, though such efforts primarily focus on the known remains rather than purely speculative cases. As of July 2025, NCMEC released new imagery for the last unidentified victim among the confirmed remains. Despite these initiatives, no concrete links to particular missing persons have been publicly confirmed beyond the established victims, leaving the possibility of further connections dependent on future discoveries or witness recollections.

Alleged national connections

Following Dean Corll's death in 1973, his accomplices and David Brooks alleged that Corll was affiliated with a larger organization based in that trafficked and murdered teenage boys across and beyond. Henley, in particular, claimed during interviews that Corll received payments from this group for procuring victims, suggesting a structured network that extended Corll's operations nationally. These assertions were detailed in over 60 hours of recorded interviews Henley provided to investigators, though no direct evidence has substantiated the full scope of such involvement. A key figure in these alleged connections is , who operated the Odyssey Foundation, a nationwide ring distributing and facilitating encounters between adults and minors. In March 1973, shortly before Corll's killing spree ended, Dallas police raided Norman's apartment and seized over 30,000 index cards listing clients interested in underage boys, along with extensive material. A tip from a young man in Dallas following Corll's death reportedly linked the raid to Corll's activities, prompting speculation that Norman supplied victims or clients to Corll's operation in Houston. However, law enforcement investigations at the time did not confirm a direct operational tie between the two. Norman's network reportedly spanned multiple cities, including , , and , where he relocated after posting bail and fleeing . This interstate reach fueled theories of a broader pedophile ring connecting Corll to other high-profile cases, such as that of in . Gacy, in jailhouse interviews during the and 1990s, named Norman as an accomplice and described his ring's involvement in producing snuff films, while Norman's associate Phil Paske had previously worked for Gacy's construction business. Despite these overlapping associations, no conclusive has linked Corll, Gacy, and Norman in a single coordinated national enterprise, and the allegations remain unproven beyond circumstantial ties.

Legacy and media

Cultural depictions

Dean Corll's crimes have inspired limited but notable artistic and dramatic portrayals in theater and film, often emphasizing the and societal shock of the Houston Mass Murders. In 2008, French director Gisèle Vienne premiered Jerk, a one-person puppet play written by American author and performed by Jonathan Capdevielle. The production presents an imaginary, poetic reconstruction of Corll's killings through the perspective of one of his accomplices, blending dark humor, somber reflection, and visceral to explore themes of and monstrosity. A 2017 independent , In a Madman's World, directed by Josh Vargas, dramatizes the events of the Houston Mass Murders, focusing on accomplice Elmer Wayne Henley's experiences before, during, and after his involvement with Corll and David Brooks. The movie portrays the abduction, torture, and burial of over 28 victims, drawing directly from historical accounts while incorporating fictional elements to heighten the narrative tension. Corll's case has also featured prominently in documentaries, which blend archival footage, interviews, and reenactments to recount the murders. The 2025 Investigation Discovery special The Serial Killer's Apprentice includes rare interviews with Henley, examining his grooming by Corll and the dynamics of their partnership over 50 years later. Similarly, the 2021 podcast The Clown and the Candyman, hosted by Jacqueline Bynon, connects Corll's crimes to those of , highlighting patterns in predatory networks through journalistic investigation and survivor perspectives. These productions underscore the enduring cultural fascination with Corll as a symbol of hidden suburban evil.

Scholarly and journalistic works

The Houston Mass Murders committed by Dean Corll have inspired a range of journalistic investigations and true crime literature, though scholarly analyses remain limited due to the case's focus on sensational true crime rather than broader criminological theory. Early coverage emphasized the shock of the discoveries in 1973, with TIME magazine's article "Behavior: The Mind of the Mass Murderer" exploring the psychological profile of Corll and his young accomplices, Elmer Wayne Henley and David Brooks, based on initial police reports and expert commentary on mass murder dynamics. This piece highlighted the disorganized nature of the investigation and the societal denial surrounding missing teenagers in 1970s Houston. One of the seminal books on the case is Jack Olsen's The Man with the Candy (1974), which draws on extensive interviews with survivors, families, and to reconstruct Corll's operations, his manipulation of vulnerable boys through his candy business, and the accomplices' roles in at least 28 murders. Olsen's work, published by , established a narrative framework for subsequent reporting by emphasizing Corll's outward normalcy and the systemic failures that allowed the killings to continue undetected for years. Later journalistic efforts include Skip Hollandsworth's "The Houston Mass Murders: What Really Happened" in (2011), an in-depth Q&A-style investigation incorporating new interviews with Henley and forensic details, revealing ongoing questions about potential additional victims and Corll's possible connections to other crimes. Hollandsworth's follow-up article, "" (2013), marked the 40th anniversary of the case's exposure, centering on the victims' families and the emotional toll, while critiquing the era's homophobia that obscured the crimes. More recent works build on forensic advancements and psychological insights. Investigative journalist Lise Olsen's The Scientist and the Serial Killer: The Search for Houston's Lost Boys (2025, Random House) details the efforts of forensic anthropologist Sharon Derrick to identify unidentified remains from Corll's burial sites, using DNA and anthropology to close cases for families decades later; the book integrates Olsen's reporting from the Houston Chronicle on over 50 years of unresolved mysteries. Katherine Ramsland's The Serial Killer's Apprentice (2024, Berkley Books) applies to examine how Corll groomed Henley as an accomplice, drawing on trial transcripts and behavioral analysis to explore the blurred lines between victim and perpetrator in adolescent involvement in serial crime. In academic contexts, Corll's case appears primarily in serial killer databases and profiling studies rather than standalone papers. The / Database includes a detailed profile of Corll, documenting his 28 confirmed victims (aged 9–21, all male), torture methods, and team-killing dynamics with accomplices, used in criminology courses for and analysis. , a professor, further analyzes the case in her 2024 Psychology Today article "Revising My Ideas About a Kid Who Killed," referencing Olsen's book to discuss Henley's evolution from victim to participant, informed by and sources. Legal scholarship, such as the 1979 decision in Brooks v. State, examines evidentiary issues in accomplice trials but offers limited insight into Corll's motivations. Overall, these works underscore the case's enduring impact on discussions of serial predation in suburban settings and forensic closure.

Recent developments and parole reviews

In May 2020, David Brooks, one of Dean Corll's accomplices who was convicted of one count of murder and serving a life sentence, died at age 65 from complications related to COVID-19 while incarcerated in a Galveston prison hospital. Elmer Wayne Henley Jr., Corll's other accomplice, who was convicted of six counts of murder and is serving six life sentences, became eligible for parole consideration after serving 40 years of his sentence. In October 2025, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles held Henley's first parole review hearing in Palestine, Texas, where he expressed remorse for his role in the killings of at least 28 victims between 1970 and 1973. On November 7, 2025, the parole board denied Henley's release, citing the severity of his crimes and the need to protect public safety, with his next eligibility set for review in five years. The decision drew widespread media attention and public opposition, including statements from victims' families advocating that Henley remain imprisoned for life. Throughout 2025, renewed interest in the case emerged through media projects, including Investigation Discovery's "The Serial Killer's Apprentice," in which Henley broke his long silence to discuss his involvement and motivations in interviews conducted earlier that year. Additionally, Public Radio aired a September 2025 episode investigating the historical context and lasting impact of the Houston Mass Murders.

References

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