BOMBSHELL: 5min Ago! More Bodies Found in New England: Serial Killer or Coincidence?
In June 2025,
a chilling discovery shook Milton, Massachusetts.
A passerby found 21-year-old Adriana Suazo dead in a wooded area near Central Avenue.
Her death marked the 13th body found across New England in just three months.

From quiet coastal towns to dense woodlands, human remains are surfacing at an alarming rate.
Police insist these cases are unrelated, but fear grips the region — with many whispering of a serial killer.

Now, reports of arrests for tampering with evidence add a new twist.
Is this a tragic string of coincidences — or is a predator hiding among us?

Tonight, we unravel the mystery that’s haunting New England’s heartland.
From the victims’ stories to the unanswered questions, we’ll dig deep to uncover the truth.
Stay with us. This is a story you won’t forget.

The horror began quietly — but it grew into a nightmare.
Let’s walk through the timeline of the 13 body discoveries that have left New England on edge.

March 6, 2025 — Norwalk, Connecticut
Police were searching for 35-year-old Paige Fannon, a hairdresser from West Islip, New York, who vanished two days earlier.
Her clothes were found scattered along the Norwalk River’s west bank. Then divers made a grim find — Paige’s body, floating in the icy water.
The cause of death remains unknown, leaving her family in anguish.

That same day, 180 miles away in Plymouth, Massachusetts, a hunter stumbled across a human skull near Route 3.
Missing its jaw, it had likely been there for months — possibly years.
No identity. No answers. Just a chilling mystery in the woods.

March 19 — Groton, Connecticut
A passerby near Colonel Ledyard Cemetery noticed a black suitcase.
A foul odor led to a horrific discovery: a dismembered torso, later identified as 58-year-old Suzanne Wormser.
Police later arrested her roommate — but at the time, the find sent shockwaves through the community.

March 26 — Foster, Rhode Island
A driver pulled over on Plainfield Pike and found remains wrapped in a trash bag.
The victim was 56-year-old Michelle Romano, a beloved advocate for the disabled, missing since August 2024.
Her family pleaded for answers — their grief compounded by rampant speculation.

April 9 — Killingly, Connecticut
Just seven miles from Foster, remains were found near old train tracks.
Believed to be a man aged 25 to 45. The victim remains unidentified.
Entered into a national database — but no matches yet.

April 10 — Framingham, Massachusetts
Firefighters battling a blaze near the Massachusetts Turnpike uncovered skeletal remains — possibly months old.
The district attorney ruled out foul play, but the timing fueled fear.

April 22 — Springfield, Massachusetts
45-year-old Meghgan Meredith was found unresponsive near a bike path.
Her death was ruled a homicide, but police called it an isolated incident — offering few details.

April 25 — Taunton, Massachusetts
51-year-old Samuel Stoval’s body was pulled from the Mill River.
Deemed non-suspicious — but his death still raised questions.

April 27 — Rocky Hill, Connecticut
72-year-old Mary Clanto was found in the Connecticut River.
Missing for a month. Was this misadventure — or something darker?

May 30 — New Haven, Connecticut
34-year-old Jasmine Wilks was found dead in Edgewood Park.
Details are scarce, but her death added to the growing tally.

June 1 — Milton, Massachusetts
21-year-old Adriana Suazo was found in a wooded area.
No signs of trauma were reported, but her sister Melanie told Boston.com:

“Her circumstances are suspicious. I just want the truth.”
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Hundreds gathered for a vigil, lighting candles to honor her vibrant spirit.
Her death marked the 13th case in just three months.

Look at this map.
From Norwalk to Milton, these discoveries cluster along highways and rivers, spanning four states — but concentrated in a tight corridor.
Is this random chance? Or does a hidden pattern lurk beneath the surface?

Let’s pause to remember those we’ve lost.
These aren’t just headlines.
They’re human lives — cut short too soon.

Paige Fannon, 35 — a hairdresser from West Islip, New York.
Known for her warm smile and kind heart. She battled mental health challenges, but her family never imagined she’d end up in the Norwalk River.
Her cause of death remains a mystery.

Michelle Romano, 56 — a pillar of her Rhode Island community, advocating for those with disabilities.
She loved painting and long walks by the ocean. Missing since August 2024.
Her remains were found in Foster, wrapped in a trash bag. Her sister, Valerie, told People:

“These rumors are killing us. Michelle was our light.”

Adriana Suazo, 21 — described by her sister Melanie as “a firecracker full of laughter and love.”
Found in Milton on June 1st. Her death sparked an outpouring of grief. A fundraiser described her as “a light in every room.”

Meghgan Meredith, 45 — found near a Springfield bike path. Her death ruled a homicide. Her life remains largely undocumented.

Denise Liry, 59 — found in New Haven. Struggled with schizophrenia. Her son said her death raises more questions than answers.

Not all victims have names.
A skull in Plymouth.
Remains in Killingly.
A leg bone in Westerly, Rhode Island.
Each case logged in a national database — but identification is slow, sometimes impossible.

Each set of remains represents a life, a family, a story waiting to be reclaimed.

New England is reeling.
A Rhode Island resident told People:

“It’s surreal, especially in a small state like this.”

Vigils have sprung up from Milton to Foster. Locals are avoiding trails, checking locks, and wondering — who might be next?

The fear is palpable. The grief, overwhelming.

As the body count rose, online speculation exploded.
A Facebook group called New England Serial Killer grew to 70,000 members.
Theories range from plausible to outlandish — truck drivers, secret cults, government cover-ups.
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In April 2025, an anonymous post claimed multiple bodies were buried along Scarborough Beach in Narragansett, Rhode Island.
Police deployed cadaver dogs, searching for days — but found nothing.
The poster later admitted it was fiction for a novel.
The hoax wasted resources and sent fear spiraling.

Other claims followed: tales of suspicious men, cryptic messages, even accusations against local figures.
None held up — but the panic grew.

Families like Michelle Romano’s and Adriana Suazo’s pleaded for truth over gossip.
As Adriana’s family said, “Don’t turn our grief into entertainment.”

Is there a serial killer? Experts say no.
Criminologist James Alan Fox told Fox News:

“There’s no consistent victim profile. No shared age, gender, or method.”

Forensic psychologist Lorie Kramer added:

“Fear makes us see connections where none exist.”

Police agree:
No forensic evidence links these 13 cases.
Some are solved, like Suzanne Wormser’s, whose roommate confessed.
Others remain unexplained — not necessarily criminal.

But the public remains skeptical.
Analyst Peter Valentin said:

“Decomposition often hides the cause of death. Without DNA or evidence, linking cases is nearly impossible.”

The Long Island serial killer haunts the public memory.
Could police be downplaying a threat to avoid panic? Or is there simply no threat?

Then, in June 2025, a bombshell:
Two individuals were arrested for interfering with investigations — one for threatening a witness, another for destroying evidence.

Who are they protecting — and why?
Could it be tied to Adriana Suazo or Meghgan Meredith? Or something larger?

Police aren’t saying. But the arrests suggest someone is hiding the truth.

A region haunted by its past
The Boston Strangler. The New Bedford Highway Killer. The Connecticut River Valley Killer.
All operated in New England. All left scars. Some were never caught.

Dr. Anne Burgess, profiler of the Boston Strangler, said:

“New England’s forests, rivers, and quiet towns are perfect cover for killers.”
May be an image of 3 people and text that says 'New e N Ne England SERIAL KILLER'
A survivor of the Connecticut River Valley Killer put it bluntly:

“These discoveries echo the past.”

So what’s really going on?
Could a single killer be responsible?
Experts say no. Too much variation.
Men. Women. Rivers. Woods. No pattern.

Some deaths — like those of Denise Liry or Samuel Stoval — may have natural causes or stem from misadventure.

Others — like Suazo’s or Meredith’s — are under active investigation.

New evidence could change everything. Or some cases may never be solved.

13 bodies. Four states. Three months. No answers.

Families mourn.
Communities fear.
The internet speculates.

But somewhere, the truth remains.