Dressing in disguise is a time-honored Halloween tradition where self-expression and secrecy often meet. But costumes can also serve a much more sinister purpose: to mask a criminal’s identity. While serial killers in signature outfits seem mostly the stuff of horror movies and TV shows, they do have real-life counterparts. Below, a few:
The Phantom Killer
A 1946 string of killings in Texarkana remains unsolved to this day. Because each attack happened after dusk and most victims were young people parked in "lovers' lanes," the spree earned the name the Texarkana Moonlight Murders. The killings became inspiration for the horror film The Town That Dreaded Sundown.
On February 22, 1946, at midnight, lovers Jimmy Hollis and Mary Jeanne Larey were violently assaulted in their car. Both survived, and Larey was able to describe their attacker to police: a man in a white mask with cut-out holes for his mouth and eyes.
The next couple was not so lucky. Over the course of 10 weeks the "Phantom Killer," as he was nicknamed, would slay a total of five and severely injure three.
"A disguise may be strategic in reducing eyewitnesses' ability to identify the culprit," says criminologist Dr. Melissa Hamilton, senior lecturer of Law and Criminal Justice at the University of Surrey. With the Phantom Killer, this was absolutely the case—lacking additional evidence or conclusive suspects, the murders were never solved. However, some people think that the Phantom Killer of Texarkana was none other than…