Warning: The following contains disturbing descriptions of violence, including sexual violence. Reader discretion is advised.
Inside Anthony Sowell's "house of horrors" in Cleveland, Ohio, police discovered a gruesome scene.
Between 2007 and 2009, Sowell, a former U.S. Marine and convicted sex offender who served 15 years for kidnapping, rape and attempted rape, murdered 11 women. He hid or buried their remains in his home and yard. Among the findings was a skull, which he had wrapped in a paper bag and placed in a bucket. The odor permeating from Sowell's house was said to be so overwhelming that people thought it came from a nearby sausage shop.
After raping them, Sowell killed most of his victims by manual strangulation, earning him the nickname "The Cleveland Strangler." He lured his victims, all Black women, to his house with promises of drugs and alcohol. On October 31, 2009, police apprehended 50-year-old Sowell after one woman, Vanessa Gay, survived a violent encounter with him.
Authorities were accused of a slow response to the case, which was exacerbated by the fact that some of Sowell's victims were never reported missing. For others, families could not get police to open up cases because their loved ones struggled with mental health issues and addiction.
"Many of the families went to the police, and the police wouldn't even take a report," Rachel Dissell, a former investigative reporter who covered the Sowell case for The Plain Dealer, tells A&E. "Police would tell them that if they're using drugs, they'll come back when they're ready."
When police did take a report, Dissell says, the families had to be persistent. The families also blamed the media for their lack of coverage of their missing family members.
A&E takes a closer look at Sowell's victims.
Crystal Dozier
Crystal Dozier, a 38-year-old mother of seven, went missing in May 2007. In a 2011 interview, Dozier's mother described her daughter as "the responsible child" and her "little mother hen." Unfortunately, after one of Dozier's children died, she struggled with drug addiction, which Sowell likely preyed upon. Because she had previously gone missing, Dozier's family accused the police of failing to investigate and launched their own campaign to find her.
In 2009, police discovered her remains next to a fence in Sowell's backyard.
Tishana Culver
Thirty-three-year-old mother Tishana Culver spent several years without stable housingbefore rebuilding her life and moving into a small apartment in the Woodlands Hill Park area of Cleveland. Her family recalls her acts of kindness, including bringing plates of food to those living in their vehicles. But, like many of Sowell's victims, Culver struggled with drugs and drifted in and out of her family's lives.
"People who are predators, serial rapists and serial killers, don't go after folks who they think people care about, because then they will get caught," says Dissell. "They go after folks who they believe or assume people won't miss or don't care about."
Culver disappeared in 2008, and her family feared the worst when they learned of Sowell's murders. On November 25, 2009, the Cuyahoga County coroner's office identified Culver's remains.