Amid the Internet speculation about a serial killer in New England, a woman from New Hampshire who survived a serial killer suspended in the 1980s is encouraging the premises to remain “vigilant.”
Detectives in social networks and some local reports have noticed the discovery of seven sets of human remains found in Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island between March and April. While the causes of death of the victims are still unknown and there seemed to be any connection between the cases until Thursday, the recent findings have premises to the limit.
“I am talking about this because, for example, I think that all these cases are connected? Maybe not, but it is unusual to have so many remains and so many bodies that appear in such a short time,” said Jane Boroski, the only suspicious survivor of the serial killer of Connecticut River Valley, Fox News Digital. “My big thing is: I don’t want people to discard this or forget because they talk about … then the authorities have more reasons to investigate.”
Boroski, who presents a podcast called “Invisible Tears”, recently shared a video on his Facebook Discussion page a private group called “New England Sk”, in which thousands of discussion findings of the users of social networks New England.
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In the last two months, human remains have been located in New Haven, Norwalk, Groton and Killingly, Connecticut; Foster, Rhode Island; and Framingham and Plymouth, Massachusetts. Some users of social networks say that the discoveries of human remains, particularly, female remains, in the three neighboring states may indicate a serial murderer.
But Connecticut State Police told Fox News Digital on Tuesday that it is not information at this time suggestion of any connection with the similar remains of the discoveries, and there is also no known threat to the public at this time, “with respect to the deaths in Connecticut.
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But Boroski is encouraging the New Englanders to “be more attentive” anyway.

Jane Borowski, center, was 22 years and seven months pregnant with her daughter, left in 1988 when a man who believes was the serial killer of the Connecticut River Valley stabbed her 27 times in a dark parking lot by New Hampshire. Both survived, but the suspect has never been captured. (Jane Boroski)
“Special women, if they are trotting trails or walking along the paths. Use the system of friends, be more attentive … and be more aware of their surroundings,” he said.
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Boroski was 22 years and seven months pregnant when he was driving home from a fair in New Hampshire on a hot day in August. It stopped in the parking lot of a closed store to buy soft drinks of an vending machine. When he returned to his vehicle and opened the soda, a man who is now believed that he was the serial killer of the Connecticut River Valley approached him.
“Evil entered my life.”
The man tried to get Boroski out of his car, but she defended himself, at which time he hero a knife for his throat and threatened her from the car. The two faced each other, but it wasn’t until Boroski ran to a vehicle that was driving on a nearby road for help that the man attacked it, stabbing her 27 times.
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“He cut my jugular … I had two collapsed lungs. He lick my liver, cut a thumb on the thumb and a knee tendon,” Boroski recalled.
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The case of the murderer of the Connecticut River Valley remains unsolved to this day, and the identity of the murderer is unknown. It is believed that he attacked and killed several women in the areas of New Hampshire and Vermont in the 1980s.
A set of human remains was found in Groton, Connecticut. (Istock)
Peter Valentin, president of the Department of Forensic Sciences of the University of New Haven Henry C. Lee College of Criminal Justice and Forensic Sciences, told Fox News Digital that the remains found in three News of New England about two months of him as “curious.”
“It is certainly … a lot of human remains to find in a short period of time.”
“The first thing that seems curious to me is the fact that seven sets of remains have one leg in the period of two months,” said Valentin. “And if that is the product of a search directed in particular areas, he believes that more remains will be found, we cannot know it, because that information is not public at this time, or if there is information to suggest or not that publie is an available rush.”
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He pointed out, in principle, that although some of the remains were intact bodies that have been identified bone, others were relegated to the point that the authorities will take to identify who the victims were. In other words, while the remains were located within two months, that does not indicate that the victims died at the same time.
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“Although thesis was found in the last two months, at least they have one leg in the thesis or in a state of decomposition for a period of time,” he said. “Now forensic speaking, the only way in which it could with any degree of confidence that the thesis cases were related to finding some child of physical evidence. That would allow him to connect a person or an object to more than one than one than one [case]And I think that most people recognize that the most definitive evidence element would be DNA. “
A set of human remains was discovered in Framingham, Massachusetts. (Istock)
Valentin added that it will be important that the authorities compare the analysis of the remains and identify the victims.
At least three of the victims in these seven cases, two in Connecticut and one in Rhode Island, have been identified as women. Police also believes that the victim found in Killingly, Connecticut, was a woman between 40 and 60 years old.
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The New England Serial Killer Facebook group, which has 57,000 members, obtained more than 10,000 new members last week and during the weekend, as Masslive.com first reported.
The searches for “New England serial killer” on Google shot around April 7, according to search engine data.