What if you were to die, but no
one was able to identify your body? What if you committed a series of terrible
crimes, but no one could identify you as the culprit? What if you went to great
lengths to hide your true identity from the world, so that people are still
debating who you are long after you’re gone?
As we’ve demonstrated before on
multiple occasions, there are few mysteries more fascinating than those
involving unidentified people. Once again, here are some strange stories
involving individuals whose true identity has never been uncovered.
10. The Charfield Railway Disaster Children
In the early morning hours of
October 13, 1928, the village of Charfield, England became the site of a
terrible tragedy. A mail train was traveling from Leeds to Bristol with 50
passengers aboard, but because of the thick fog, the crew failed to see a red
signal before reaching Charfield railway station. They wound up crashing into a
freight train, and the derailment ignited some gas cylinders, causing a massive
fire. A total of 15 passengers lost their lives, and 23 others were injured.
This incident would open up a most unexpected mystery after it was discovered
that two of the deceased passengers were an unidentified young boy and girl.
The fire burned these two children
beyond recognition. They could not be matched to any of the other passengers,
and no one ever came forward to claim them. There were even some far-fetched
theories that the charred victims were not even children but a pair of small
jockeys or some ventriloquist’s dummies.
After the crash, a memorial to
victims was built in Charfield, and the two children were buried there.
According to local legend, an unidentified woman wearing would show up at the
memorial on the anniversary of the crash every year and place flowers on the
children’s graves. The last appearance of this woman is believed to be sometime
during the early 1960s. By this time, word had spread about her appearances, so
members of the media showed up in Charfield on the anniversary date. When they
tried to approach the woman one year, she took off and has not been seen since.
9. Mr. Cruel
One of the most infamous
unidentified criminals in Australia’s history victimized four Melbourne
children and earned the nickname “Mr. Cruel.” The assailant’s first known
attack occurred in the middle of the night on August 22, 1987, when he broke
into a family’s home. After tying up the couple and their young son, Mr. Cruel
proceeded to sexually assault their 11-year-old daughter. On December 27, 1988,
he broke into the home of another family, tying up the parents and kidnapping
their 10-year-old daughter. She was sexually assaulted before being released 18
hours later. On July 3, 1990, Mr. Cruel broke into another home and kidnapped a
13-year-old girl. She was held captive and sexually assaulted in a house for 50
hours before he released her. Finally, Mr. Cruel’s next crime would end in
murder.
On April 13, 1991, 13-year-old
Karmein Chan was abducted from her home. This time, the perpetrator left a
spray-painted message on her parents’ vehicle implying that the abduction was
drug-related, but this was only done to mislead police. Karmein remained a
missing person for one year before her decomposed body was found. She was shot
three times in the head.
The modus operandi of these
crimes is so similar that police are certain they were committed by the same
man. Mr. Cruel would bathe his female victims before releasing them to
eliminate potential forensic evidence, often going to meticulous lengths to
clean up after himself. According to one surviving victim, Mr. Cruel set up a
camera to document his sexual assaults on her, and authorities believe he is
likely involved in the distribution of child pornography. In spite of an
extensive investigation in which over 27,000 suspects have been checked into,
Mr. Cruel has never been identified.
8. Andrea Jerome Walker
In 2006, a black man was
convicted in Toronto after being caught with $10 worth of crack cocaine.
Authorities could not have guessed that this routine drug bust would open the
doors to a bizarre mystery that has turned into a bureaucratic nightmare.
One year earlier, the man had
arrived in Canada using an American passport stating his name as “Andrea Jerome
Walker.” However, when the Canada Border Services Agency now tried to deport
him back to the United States, they learned the passport was fraudulent and
Andrea Jerome Walker was not his real name. As a result, “Walker” was
incarcerated in an immigration detention facility while officials tried to
uncover his true identity. He has since earned the moniker “The Man with No
Name.”
Walker has remained in
immigration detention for nearly nine years because authorities cannot figure
out what to do with him.
He cannot be deported back to his
home country until it can be determined which country he actually originated
from. A fingerprint check has revealed that Walker has lived under at least
eight different identities in numerous countries. After years of confinement,
Walker finally revealed that one of these identities, “Michael Mvogo,” was his
real name, and he originally hailed from Cameroon. However, since Walker has
already lied about his identity on multiple occasions, the Cameroon government
will not accept him without definitive proof that he is Michael Mvogo. Even
after making a failed attempt at a constitutional challenge to secure his
release, Andrea Jerome Walker continues to remain in limbo as a man without an
identity.
7. Lady of the Dunes
Thousands of deceased John and
Jane Does are found and never identified, but one of the most famous examples
is a woman known only as “Lady of the Dunes.” On July 26, 1974, the naked
decomposed body of a young female was discovered at the Race Point dunes near
Provincetown, Massachusetts. The left side of her skull had been bludgeoned,
and her throat was slashed all.
The victim’s hands and some of
her teeth were removed in a presumed attempt to prevent identification. She was
also lying on top of a beach towel with a bandana and pair of jeans being used
as a pillow beneath her head. Her age was believed to be between 20 and 40
years old. There is some speculation that the unidentified woman might have
been Rory Gene Kissinger, a 25-year-old criminal who escaped from jail in 1974
after being arrested in a drug raid.
One possible suspect in the
woman’s death is notorious mobster James “Whitey” Bulger, who was one of the
world’s most wanted fugitives before his. Bulger was known to frequent the
Provincetown area, and eyewitness reports placed him with a woman resembling
the Lady of the Dunes in 1974. Bulger was also known for removing the teeth of
his murder victims to prevent identification. There is some speculation that
the Lady of the Dunes was a prostitute Bulger had picked up, but if she is Rory
Gene Kissinger, one theory is that Bulger had her killed to prevent her from
snitching about criminal activities. Thus far, there is no definitive evidence
connecting Bulger to the crime, and since DNA samples for Kissinger do not
exist, she has never been conclusively identified as the Lady of the Dunes.
6. Mr. Bojangles
On May 5, 1993, the town of West
Memphis, Arkansas, would be plagued by one of the most controversial criminal
cases of all time after the brutal murder of three eight-year-old boys:
Christopher Byers, Michael Moore, and Steve Branch. Three local
teenagers—Damian Echols, Jesse Misskelley, and Jason Baldwin (the “West Memphis
Three”)—were convicted of the crime but soon acquired a slew of supporters who
believed they were wrongfully convicted. The case generated so much controversy
that the West Memphis Three were released from prison in 2011 after entering an
Alford plea. There has always been much debate about who the real killer of the
three boys might be, but a major wild card in this story is an unidentified
individual known only as “Mr. Bojangles.”
On the night the boys went
missing, West Memphis police received a phone call from the manager of a
Bojangles’ chicken restaurant, which happened to be located near the wooded
area where the victims were eventually found. According to witnesses, a black
man entered the restaurant and went into the ladies’ room, where he remained
for nearly an hour. He was bleeding, covered in mud, and looked disoriented and
shell-shocked.
By the time police arrived to
take a report, the man had already left, but since they were preoccupied with
the search for the missing boys, they did not inspect the washroom until the
following day. Small blood samples were taken from the washroom wall, but the
evidence was never sent for analysis and inexplicably went missing. The
mysterious “Mr. Bojangles” was not seen again.
Even if this man had nothing to
do with the murders, it’s possible he may have stumbled upon the victims’ bodies
at one point or witnessed something which could provide much-needed answers for
the West Memphis Three case.
5. B. Traven
It’s not uncommon for writers to
publish works of literature under a pseudonym, but few of them went to greater
lengths to conceal their identity than a mysterious author named “B. Traven.”
Over the course of two decades, B. Traven published 12 novels and several short
stories under this pseudonym. His most famous novel is probably The Treasure of
the Sierra Madre, a 1927 adventure story that was eventually adapted into an
acclaimed, Academy Award–winning film starring Humphrey Bogart. Yet in spite of
writing such an iconic piece of work, Traven managed to take the secret of his
true identity to his grave. When he died in 1969, he left behind a will
claiming his real name was “Traven Torsvan Croves” and that he was born in
Chicago in 1890. However, there is no evidence that anyone named Traven Torsvan
Croves actually existed.
It is believed that B. Traven
spent the early part of his life living in Europe, as many of his works were
written in German before they were translated into English. Traven wrote most
of his novels while living in Mexico and worked hard to maintain his privacy.
He limited his interactions with other people, and very few photographs of him
exist.
There are many theories about who
Traven might be, but the best candidate is Ret Marut, a German actor who
disappeared after fleeing Europe in 1924. Shortly afterward, B. Traven started
publishing his novels in Mexico. Marut was also known for being very protective
about his identity, and it is speculated that he previously lived under a
different name before he became an actor. Were Ret Marut and Traven Torsvan
Croves the same person? Whatever the real truth, the identity of B. Traven
continues to remain a mystery.
4. The Boy in the Dean Corll Polaroid
One of the worst serial killers
in the history of the United States is Dean Corll, who is believed to have
raped, tortured, and murdered at least 28 victims during the early 1970s. Corll
exclusively targeted teenage boys and was nicknamed “The Candy Man” because his
family owned a candy factory and he often handed out candy to children. Corll
worked alongside two teenage accomplices, Elmer Wayne Henley Jr. and David
Brooks, who helped lure Corll’s victims to his home. In 1973, Henley shot Corll
to death to prevent him from murdering one of his friends. Henley and Brooks
both received life sentences for their roles in Corll’s murders, but a recent
piece of evidence suggests that the horrific saga of The Candy Man may not be
completely over.
In 2012, filmmaker Josh Vargas
was doing research for a movie about Henley’s life and went through an old box
containing Henley’s personal effects. He uncovered a faded Polaroid of what
appeared to be a handcuffed teenage boy. Since the boy looks genuinely
terrified, there is little doubt that the picture was taken right before Corll
murdered him. The problem is that nobody can figure out the boy’s identity, as
he does not resemble any of Corll’s known victims. Henley also denies knowing
who the boy is.
One possible theory is that the
victim might be Darren Bruce Hillis, a 14-year-old who vanished from Virginia
in 1973. The photo has been released to the media, but thus far, no one has
been able to identify the boy who might be Dean Corll’s 29th victim.
3. The Toledo Clubber
There are many notorious serial
killers who have never have been identified, but few of them were as
unpredictable as the “Toledo Clubber,” who committed a strange, random series
of crimes in Toledo, Ohio, during the mid-1920s. The unknown assailant started
off his crime spree by setting fire to a series of lumberyards in 1925. When
the city responded by posting guards at lumberyards, the perpetrator decided to
start bombing homes and tenements. When federal agents were called in to investigate,
the bombings suddenly came to an end, and the assailant soon turned to murder.
Over the course of one week in
November, at least nine women were attacked by an unknown male, who proceeded
to rape them and club their helpless bodies with a heavy object before leaving
them for dead. Four of these women lost their lives, and the attacker became
known as the “Toldeo Clubber.”
After a reward was offered for
the Clubber’s capture, the violence ended for a year. However, on October 26,
1926, two Toledo women were raped and bludgeoned within a few hours of each
other, and their deaths matched the Clubber’s modus operandi. Shortly
thereafter, another Toledo lumberyard and several other buildings were torched
by arson, but once again, the Clubber’s random series of crimes came to an end
without explanation.
In 1927, the investigation turned
toward an incarcerated man named James C. Coyner, who was serving time in
prison for grave robbery. Four female skulls were found in his trunk, and since
he had mentioned being in Toledo before his arrest, he was looked at as a
possible suspect. However, no evidence ever connected Coyner to the crimes, and
the infamous Toledo Clubber was never identified.
2. Monica Libao
Throughout her childhood, Monica
Libao moved around a lot and spent the first 15 years of her life living at 28
different addresses with her parents, Pablo and Burma. After she turned 16,
Monica discovered a secret after her mother became ill and Monica caught a glimpse
of her medical records. She noticed that Burma underwent a hysterectomy nearly
two decades before Monica was even born.
After confronting Burma about
this, Monica was told that one of her older half-sisters was her real
biological mother. After giving birth to Monica when she was 19, the sister
gave her up and let Burma and Pablo raise her instead. However, when Monica
questioned her sister, she was informed that Burma’s story was a complete lie
and that Monica’s real mother had actually sold her to the Libaos in exchange
for a bus ticket.
The story got even more bizarre
when Monica found her old birth certificate, which stated she was born in
Chicago but listed no hospital or doctor and had been filed when Monica was
seven years old. Years later, during a heated family get-together, Monica
finally learned about an incident where her mother hid her from the police
while she was a baby. She became convinced that her parents had kidnapped her
from her real family, which would explain why the Libaos moved around so much
during her youth.
Monica has since hired
investigators to look into her past and find out who she really is. At one
point, she underwent a DNA test to see if she might be Elizabeth, a two-year
Missouri girl who vanished from her family’s front yard in 1965. However, the
test ruled this out, so the truth about Monica Libao’s real identity continues
to elude her.
1. Little Lord Fauntleroy
On March 8, 1921, the body
of a young boy was found in some water behind the O’Laughlin Quarry in Waukesha
County, Wisconsin. He was believed to be between five and seven years old and
had been struck on the head with a blunt instrument.
Five weeks before the boy
was discovered, a quarry employee reported that a couple had stopped by in a
vehicle to ask if he’d seen a young boy, and the woman appeared to be crying.
In spite of this, no one ever came forward to claim the boy’s body, even after
a reward was offered for information. Curiously, the boy was dressed in upscale
clothing, suggesting that he hailed from a wealthy family. Since the victim
bore a resemblance to the title character in Francis Hodgson Burnett’s famous
children’s novel, he was nicknamed “Little Lord Fauntleroy.”
The case remained cold for
28 years, till a connection was made between Little Lord Fauntleroy and Homer
Lemay, a six-year-old Milwaukee child who seemed to disappear in 1921. Homer’s
father, Edmond Lemay, claimed that after Homer’s mother died of tuberculosis,
he left his son in the custody of a couple named the Nortons. According to
Edmond, the Nortons took Homer on a trip to Argentina, where he was
subsequently killed in a car accident. However, an investigation could uncover
no record of Homer Lemay’s accident or any evidence that the Nortons even
existed.
Further suspicion
surrounded Edmond Lemay because his third wife mysteriously disappeared in
1948, and he faced legal trouble for forging her signature on some checks.
However, no definitive evidence was ever found to connect Homer Lemay to the
Little Lord Fauntleroy case, so the mystery remains unsolved nearly a century
later.
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