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Welcome to True Crime Storytime, and thank you for joining us. Please follow our podcast and share it with your friends.

In this episode, we examine the case of one of America’s most unsettling serial killers, a man who taunted police and the media for decades while hiding in plain sight.

Important: If you don't want to know what happened before listening to our podcast, do not read this description!

The BTK Killer was responsible for a series of murders in and around Wichita, Kansas, between 1974 and 1991. The name BTK stands for Bind, Torture, Kill, a phrase the offender himself used to describe his crimes. For years, he appeared to vanish, leaving behind an open case that haunted investigators and the families of his victims.

In this episode, we explore how the killer communicated with authorities, sending letters, poems and packages to newspapers and police, demanding attention and recognition.

These communications not only fuelled public fear but also revealed the offender’s desire for control and notoriety. Despite the taunts, traditional investigative methods repeatedly failed to identify him.

We examine how the case was unexpectedly reopened in the early 2000s when the killer resumed contact with the media. A crucial mistake followed.

Trusting information he received from police, the BTK Killer sent a computer disk that could be traced back to a local church. That single act led investigators to Dennis Rader, a church leader and local council compliance officer who had lived a seemingly ordinary life.

Rader was arrested in 2005 and later pleaded guilty to ten murders. His confession revealed the extent of his planning, the long gaps between his crimes and the double life he maintained for decades. He was sentenced to ten consecutive life terms in prison, where he remains today.

This episode examines how ego, technology and patience ultimately brought an end to a case that had seemed unsolvable for over thirty years.

Thank you for joining us on True Crime Storytime.