

“Nothing factual about the posts we’ve seen,” Norcross Police Chief Bill Grogan said Monday. Some of the posts mention a supposed third killing in the nearby city of Norcross, Georgia, but police there are investigating no such reports. Atlanta police have not discussed any possible leads they might have. “Regarding the incident in Yellow River Park, we have leads we are pursuing but I can’t release those details as yet,” said Richter, the Gwinnett officer. Officer Steve Avery, of the Atlanta Police Department, said in an email that the killing of the woman in Gwinnett County is “not related to the incident in Piedmont Park.” Police in Gwinnett County and in Atlanta are not working together on the two cases, Richter added. Authorities there are investigating the case in Yellow River Park.

#Serial killer atlanta serial
“There is nothing to connect the two cases and no reason to believe a serial killer is operating in the area,” said Gwinnett County police Sgt. The parks are about 20 miles (32 kilometers) from each other. In the second case, Tori Lang, 18, was found shot to death in Yellow River Park, near Stone Mountain, around dawn. In that case, 40-year-old Katherine Janness, was found stabbed multiple times. The first killing was discovered about 1 a.m., on July 28, in Atlanta’s Piedmont Park.

Still, false reports making the claim circulated widely across social media with warnings to be careful. Atlanta-area police officials are not treating the two cases as being connected, and they say there’s no evidence of a serial killer targeting individuals in that region. Law enforcement say the killings are not related and there’s no reason to believe they are the work of one person.ĬLAIM: A serial killer is loose in Atlanta and police officials are not sharing the details of an ongoing serial killer investigation. ATLANTA (AP) - After two women were found dead in Atlanta-area parks last week, false reports spread on social media suggesting a serial killer was on the loose.
