America built millions of miles of highway to move people, connect towns, and promise freedom. But for some killers, the road became something else entirely: cover.
In this episode of Deadly Truths with Becca, we examine two of the most haunting patterns in American true crime: the so-called Redhead Murders—a loose cluster of murdered and unidentified women found near highways in the 1970s and 1980s—and the still-unsolved case of the I-70 Killer, who moved through small stores along the interstate in 1992, killing with speed, precision, and almost no trace.
This is not a story about one tidy theory.
It is not a story where every victim fits neatly into the same box.
And it is not a story where the road itself is evil.
It is a story about vulnerability, mobility, missed connections, Jane Does, women on the margins, and the terrifying advantage anonymity once gave violent men moving through ordinary America.
We look at what is known, what is speculation, what DNA has helped uncover, and what still refuses to come into focus. From Debra Jackson—once known only as “Orange Socks”—to the women linked by hair color, geography, and disappearance, to the clerks gunned down along I-70, this episode asks a harder question:
Did America’s highways simply connect the country—
or did they also create the perfect hunting ground?
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This episode discusses homicide, violence against women, unidentified remains, and serial murder. Some details may be disturbing.
This episode is intended for historical, educational, and commentary purposes. It draws from publicly available reporting, law enforcement information, and documentary sources. In cases involving unsolved crimes, unidentified victims, or disputed connections, some interpretations remain speculative. Wherever possible, this episode distinguishes between confirmed facts, investigative theories, and unresolved questions.
The term “Redhead Murders” is a media label, not a formally solved or universally accepted single case classification. Not every victim discussed has been conclusively linked to the same offender.
If you or someone you know is experiencing violence, stalking, or crisis:
National Domestic Violence Hotline
Call or text: 800-799-7233
RAINN National Sexual Assault Hotline
Call: 800-656-4673
VictimConnect Resource Center
Call or text: 855-4-VICTIM
988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline
Call or text: 988
NamUs
National database for missing, unidentified, and unclaimed persons
Sources: A&E Crime Central; FBI Highway Serial Killings Initiative; Missouri State Highway Patrol I-70 Killer case materials; Williamson County Sheriff’s Office / Williamson County records on Debra Louise Jackson; NamUs; People Magazine; The Doe Network.