Benjamin Atkins

Killer

Popular As The Woodward Corridor Killer The Highland Park Strangler

Birthday August 26, 1968

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Detroit, Michigan, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1997-9-17, Charles Egeler Reception and Guidance Center, Jackson, Michigan, U.S. (29 years old)

Nationality United States

#45266 Most Popular

1968

Benjamin Thomas Atkins (August 26, 1968 – September 17, 1997), also known as The Woodward Corridor Killer, was an American serial killer and rapist who murdered, tortured, and raped 11 women in Highland Park and Detroit, Michigan, during a period of eight months between December 1991 and August 1992.

He was apprehended after being arrested for rape charges and soon after he confessed to the murders.

Benjamin "Tony" Atkins was born on August 26, 1968, in Detroit, the younger of two sons.

His family lived in a poor neighborhood, and both of his parents were drug addicts and alcoholics.

Shortly after his birth, Tony's father left the family.

1970

In 1970, Benjamin's mother abandoned him and he wound up in an orphanage, where he spent his childhood and youth.

While living there, he was physically assaulted by other children, and at the age of 10, was raped by one of the employees.

Over the next five years, he was continuously subjected to sexual harassment by other boys, until he eventually escaped and reunited with his mother.

For some time, he lived together with her and his older brother, but one day, he realised that his mother worked as a prostitute.

Due to this, both he and his brother saw her have sex with clients at the house on several occasions.

1980

Disgusted with his mother's actions, he left the house again in the late 1980s, living on the streets and doing drugs, and eventually developed a drug addiction.

Because he lacked formal education, Atkins was forced to work in low-skilled labor jobs for low wages, and spent the nights at homeless shelters.

In his free time, he frequented places inhabited by pimps and prostitutes, but was never arrested for any serious crimes.

Most of his acquaintances claimed to be very fond of him, but at the same time noted that when drunk or on drugs, he showed signs of an antisocial personality and displayed misogynistic behavior.

Atkins chose young and middle-aged destitute women, often prostitutes or drug addicts, as victims.

He would lure them to abandoned buildings where he sexually assaulted them.

After strangling his victims, he would leave the bodies at the crime scenes, with some of them discovered months after their deaths.

1991

The first victim to be discovered was 31-year-old Debbie Ann Friday, found on December 14, 1991, after she had gone missing on December 8.

On December 30, the body of 26-year-old Bertha Jean Mason was found.

She had gone missing on December 11 and was last seen leaving her home and entering a store, after which she was never seen alive again.

Relatives of Chalk told police she went missing after she was put on a wanted list in early November 1991.

On April 9, the body of 38-year-old Brenda Mitchell was found in an abandoned house, after she had gone missing four days earlier with her two kids to go to the store.

Mitchell was found almost completely naked, except for a scarf wrapped around her neck.

Her death was initially believed to be a drug overdose.

1992

On January 3, 1992, while demolishing an abandoned house, workmen discovered the body of 36-year-old Patricia Cannon George, who had been put on a wanted list in early December 1991 following a drug den bust within Woodward Corridor.

On January 25, the body of 39-year-old Vickie Truelove was located: like the other victims, she had been sexually assaulted and strangled.

At the end of January, Atkins was arrested at an abandoned building and taken to the police station for interrogation.

Due to a lack of evidence to prove his guilt in the murders, he was released.

On February 17, the corpses of three women were found in three separate rooms in the former Monterey Hotel in Highland Park: they were 34-year-old Valerie Chalk, 23-year-old Juanita Hardy and an unidentified Jane Doe.

The unidentified woman was identified by forensic genealogy in 2024, but her name was withheld by her family's request.

Atkins was arrested on rape charges on August 21, 1992, after he was identified on a Detroit street by 34-year-old Darlene Saunders, whom Atkins had assaulted in October 1991.

He categorically denied any involvement in the murders, claiming that he was homosexual.

After further interrogations, the police officers familiarized him with the psychological profile they had compiled of the killer.

After 12 hours, Atkins admitted to the murders of 11 women.

1994

He was ultimately found guilty and given several life sentences in April 1994.

1997

He died from AIDS in 1997.

2010

He described in detail the appearance and clothing of the victims, and even indicated the whereabouts of the 10th and 11th victims, 21-year-old Ocinena Waymer and 29-year-old LaTanya Showanda Smith.

Their disappearances were not connected to the murders until Atkins' confession, and the bodies were found on the indicated place that same day.

2015

A few days later, on the 15th, the partially decomposed corpse of 43-year-old Vicki Beasley-Brown, who was last seen alive on March 25, was discovered.

On June 15, the body of 40-year-old Joanne O'Rourke was found.