Help Solve the Abduction and Murder of Holly Piirainen in Sturbridge, MA on August 5, 1993
CONTENT WARNING: This web site includes frank discussion of the abduction, sexual abuse, and murder of a child under the age of 12.
The people who knew and loved Holly probably didn’t know it at the time, but their panic and gut-retching fear was justified.
Expert police detectives, academics, and clinicians who have studied cases of predatory abductor murderers found that:
In the opinion of The Four of Us, the most important study of very similar kidnappings, assaults and murders of victims like Holly Piirainen is entitled Case Management for Missing Children Homicide Investigation. The research was conducted by the United States Department of Justice and the State Attorney General of Washington state and was published in 1997.
A second study by the same agencies entitled Investigative Case Management for Missing Children Homicides: Report II was published in 2006.
The second study took the additional step of analyzing eight hundred solved cases of child abduction/murder from across the United States. The study found that, in a vast majority of similar cases (76%), the victim was a female slightly over eleven years of age, came into contact with the abductor in 80% of the cases within ¼ mile of her home, and was an “average child” living a normal life with a normal family.
What kind of person would commit this type of crime?
These studies found the following characteristics described the “average” perpetrator of this rare crime:
These two studies identified another characteristic of this type of crime important to police detectives: in 74% of investigations, the name of the killer was known to police in the first week of the investigation.