In December 1992, in Phoenix, Arizona, Angela Brosso went for a bike ride on her 22nd birthday and never came back. Her body was later found in a field behind her home. She had been badly hurt and her life taken in a very brutal way. A few days later, her head was found in a canal about 3 kilometers from where her body had been discovered.
The next year, in September 1993, another young woman, 17-year-old Melanie Bernas, also disappeared while riding her bike in the same area. Her body was found floating in the Arizona Canal, the same one where Angela’s head had been found. Police didn’t share many details, but said she had been hurt in a violent way, though not in the same exact manner as Angela.
DNA found at both scenes linked the two murders, but it took years before police began to suspect one man. He had attacked two other women—one as a teen, which landed him in juvenile detention, and another in 2002, though he was found not guilty in that case because the court believed it was self-defense.
Still, detectives believed he was the person behind the earlier crimes. They collected a DNA sample from something he had thrown away. That DNA matched what was found at the scenes.
In 2015, Bryan Patrick Miller—who called himself “The Zombie Hunter” because he drove an old police car covered with fake blood—was finally arrested. He had managed to avoid being caught for over 20 years.
During his trial, he said he wasn’t mentally fit to be judged, but the court disagreed. He later asked for life in prison instead of a harsher sentence. But because of how cruel his crimes were, the judge sentenced him to death in June this year. He is now on death row, waiting for his punishment. In a way, as some have said, he is already a “living dead.” Continue reading
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