The Mystery Of Hawaii's Honolulu Strangler Still Baffles People Today
While Hawaii is often considered to be safer than many locales in the continental United States, the Aloha State isn’t all rainbows and tropical flowers. This is evidenced by a grisly unsolved murder case that dates back more than thirty years on the beautiful island of Oahu. Hawaii’s first known serial killer — the Honolulu Strangler — was responsible for the murders of five women between 1985 and 1986, and was never caught.


Just two weeks later, on January 30, 21-year-old Denise Hughes, a secretary for a telephone company who commuted by bus, did not show up for work. Her body was found in Moanalua Stream (pictured above) by three fishermen on February 1. It was after the third body was discovered that a serial killer task force was established to hunt the man now referred to as the "Honolulu Strangler" or the "Honolulu Rapist."


An unidentified 43-year-old caucasian man came forward to police, telling them that a psychic told him a body was at Sand Island. On May 3, the informant took police officers to an exact location, but was wrong. Pesce’s body was found in a different area on the island: she was naked with her hands tied behind her back.
With help from the FBI and the Green River task force, the Honolulu Police Department set up a 27-person task force to find the Honolulu Strangler. The killer was profiled as an opportunist, attacking vulnerable women – who were, for example, waiting at bus stops – as opposed to a killer who stalked his victims. It was also thought that he lived or worked in the area of the attacks, Waipahu, or Sand Island.

He was described as "Caucasian, middle aged, clean cut, receding hairline, black glasses, polite" by an assistant manager and waitress at the La Mariana Sailing Club who recounted that he was a regular customer who seemed to be a little too interested in her at the time. She matched his victim type: petite and brunette. One day, she was extremely tired at the end of her shift and he tried to convince her to let him give her a ride home: instead, a local biker who the waitress had gotten to know drove her home on the back of his motorcycle. A few days later, as she recounts in a blog post, he was hauled off in cuffs.

Police followed the suspect, and a $25,000 reward for information was put out by private businesses. Two months after the suspect’s arrest, a woman came forward claiming that she saw Pesce with a man on the night of her murder. She successfully picked the suspect out of a photo lineup. The police believed they had found their killer, but due to circumstantial evidence, the unidentified suspect was never charged. Rumor has it that the suspect actually got off on a technicality, moved to California shortly after his release and died in 2005.
To this day, no one has been charged or convicted in these five gruesome murders. Do you think the police let the guilty man slip away? Or was it someone else?
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