
Little remembers being arrested for shoplifting in a North Little Rock Kroger grocery store. He reportedly shoplifted with the woman, then she sold the merchandise. Little stayed with her on and off for about three days. He described the woman as 24 years old, 5’5” - 5’7” tall, and approximately 200 pounds. He remembered it was cold and possibly snowing when they met. Little said he encountered a black female in a transient area of Little Rock, Arkansas, between 19. He does not believe the body was ever found. Little dragged Marianne’s body approximately 200 yards into the thick, muddy water. He then drove further down Highway 27, into the Everglades, and turned down a dirt road that led to a river or a swamp. Little drove Marianne north on Highway 27 and killed her on a driveway, possibly near a sugarcane field. When they arrived there, one of Marianne’s roommates asked them to buy a can of shaving cream, so they returned to Little’s car-a gold 4-door Pontiac LeMans. Little stated Marianne lived with several other roommates between Brownsville and Liberty City. A few days later, they met again at a bar in Overtown, where Little offered to give her a ride home. Little first met Marianne at a bar known as The Pool or Pool Palace near 17th Avenue in Miami. Little said Marianne was between 5’6” - 5’7” tall and approximately 140 pounds. Little recalled her name was Marianne or Mary Ann. Little recounted that in 1971 or 1972 he met an attractive 18- to 19-year-old transgender black woman in Miami, Florida. If you have any information linked to Little’s confessions, please contact the FBI at 1-800-CALL-FBI or submit a tip online at. ViCAP, with the support of the Texas Rangers, has provided additional information and details about five cases in hopes that someone may remember a detail that could further the investigation. The FBI is asking for the public’s help in matching the remaining unconfirmed confessions. “Even though he is already in prison, the FBI believes it is important to seek justice for each victim-to close every case possible.” “For many years, Samuel Little believed he would not be caught because he thought no one was accounting for his victims,” said ViCAP Crime Analyst Christie Palazzolo. Many of his victims’ deaths, however, were originally ruled overdoses or attributed to accidental or undetermined causes. Little says he strangled his 93 victims between 19.

Law enforcement has been able to verify 50 confessions, with many more pending final confirmation. Little has confessed to 93 murders, and FBI crime analysts believe all of his confessions are credible.
