The Cruellest Cemetery Serial Killer _ The New Detectives episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 15, 2026 · 49 MIN

The Cruellest Cemetery Serial Killer _ The New Detectives

from FilmRise True Crime · host FilmRise True Crime

A serial killer who buried his victims beneath the floor of his own home. Another who scattered bone fragments across an eighteen-acre estate. A third who dug up corpses to desecrate them again and again. These are the cemetery killers—predators who turned graves into dumping grounds.In this episode of The New Detectives, the groundbreaking Discovery Channel series that aired from 1996 to 2004 and inspired CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, forensic experts examine killers who used burial sites to hide their crimes. The episode titled Grave Secrets, which originally aired on February 11, 2003, follows investigators as they uncover bodies that lay hidden for years before forensic scientists were called to reveal buried clues [citation:1]. One of the most notorious cases featured is that of John Wayne Gacy, who murdered thirty-three young men and boys, burying most of their bodies in the crawl space beneath his Chicago home [citation:3][citation:7]. When the first body was discovered on December 22, 1978, it opened a nightmare that would see nine unidentified victims buried together in a ceremony where the mourners were reporters and cameramen because there were no grieving parents left to attend [citation:7].The episode also explores how investigators use ground-penetrating radar, cadaver dogs, and forensic anthropology to locate remains that killers believed would never be found. From shallow graves in remote forests to hidden crypts beneath suburban lawns, the cemetery serial killers thought the earth would keep their secrets. Forensic science proved otherwise.Turn down the lights, put on your headphones, and press play because the ground remembers what the killer tried to forget.

A serial killer who buried his victims beneath the floor of his own home. Another who scattered bone fragments across an eighteen-acre estate. A third who dug up corpses to desecrate them again and again. These are the cemetery killers—predators who turned graves into dumping grounds.In this episode of The New Detectives, the groundbreaking Discovery Channel series that aired from 1996 to 2004 and inspired CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, forensic experts examine killers who used burial sites to hide their crimes. The episode titled Grave Secrets, which originally aired on February 11, 2003, follows investigators as they uncover bodies that lay hidden for years before forensic scientists were called to reveal buried clues [citation:1]. One of the most notorious cases featured is that of John Wayne Gacy, who murdered thirty-three young men and boys, burying most of their bodies in the crawl space beneath his Chicago home [citation:3][citation:7]. When the first body was discovered on December 22, 1978, it opened a nightmare that would see nine unidentified victims buried together in a ceremony where the mourners were reporters and cameramen because there were no grieving parents left to attend [citation:7].The episode also explores how investigators use ground-penetrating radar, cadaver dogs, and forensic anthropology to locate remains that killers believed would never be found. From shallow graves in remote forests to hidden crypts beneath suburban lawns, the cemetery serial killers thought the earth would keep their secrets. Forensic science proved otherwise.Turn down the lights, put on your headphones, and press play because the ground remembers what the killer tried to forget.

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The Cruellest Cemetery Serial Killer _ The New Detectives

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This episode was published on April 15, 2026.

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A serial killer who buried his victims beneath the floor of his own home. Another who scattered bone fragments across an eighteen-acre estate. A third who dug up corpses to desecrate them again and again. These are the cemetery killers—predators who...

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