Shallow Graves: The Hunt for the New Bedford Highway Serial Killer
Description
Eleven women went missing over the spring and summer of 1988 in New Bedford,
Massachusetts, an old fishing port known as the Whaling City, where Moby Dick,
Frederick Douglass, textile mills, and heroin-dealing represent just a few of
the many threads in the community’s diverse fabric. In Shallow Graves,
investigative reporter Maureen Boyle tells the story of a case that has
haunted New England for thirty years. The Crimes: The skeletal remains of nine
of the women, aged nineteen to thirty-six, were discovered near highways
around New Bedford. Some had clearly been strangled, others were so badly
decomposed that police were left to guess how they had died. The Victims: All
the missing women had led troubled lives of drug addiction, prostitution, and
domestic violence, including Nancy Paiva, whose sister was a hard-working
employee of the City of New Bedford, and Debra Greenlaw DeMello, who came from
a solidly middle-class family but fell into drugs and abusive relationships.
In a bizarre twist, Paiva’s clothes were found near DeMello’s body. The
Investigators: Massachusetts state troopers Maryann Dill and Jose Gonsalves
were the two constants in a complex cast of city, county, and state cops and
prosecutors. They knew the victims, the suspects, and the drug-and-crime-
riddled streets of New Bedford. They were present at the beginning of the case
and they stayed to the bitter end. The Suspects: Kenneth Ponte, a New Bedford
attorney and deputy sheriff with an appetite for drugs and prostitutes, landed
in the investigative crosshairs from the start. He was indicted by a grand
jury in the murder of one of the victims, but those charges were later
dropped. Anthony DeGrazia was a loner who appeared to fit the classic serial-
killer profile: horrific childhood abuse, charming, charismatic, but prone to
bursts of violence. He hunted prostitutes in the city by night and served at a
Catholic church by day. Which of these two was the real killer? Or was it
someone else entirely? Maureen Boyle first broke the story in 1988 and stayed
with it for decades. In Shallow Graves she spins a riveting narrative about
the crimes, the victims, the hunt for the killers, and the search for justice,
all played out against the backdrop of an increasingly impoverished community
beset by drugs and crime. Drawing on more than one hundred interviews, along
with police reports, first-person accounts, and field reporting both during
the killings and more recently, Shallow Graves brings the reader behind the
scenes of the investigation, onto the streets of the city, and into the homes
of the families still hoping for answers. Read more
Features:
Product Details:
- Publisher : ForeEdge; 1st edition (September 5, 2017)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 312 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1512600741
- ISBN-13 : 42
- Item Weight : 14.5 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.78 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #657,769 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) #1,361 in Serial Killers True Accounts #11,206 in U.S. State & Local History
- #1,361 in Serial Killers True Accounts
- #11,206 in U.S. State & Local History