On January 11, 1959, the Jackson family—Carroll, 29, his wife Mildred, 27, and their two young daughters—are driving along a dirt road in Virginia, returning home from a family visit, when they are forced to stop and are abducted at gunpoint. A few days later, their car is found empty on the side of the road, with keys in the ignition, Mildred's purse on the seat and dolls scattered about. The family's disappearance triggers a massive search-and-rescue operation and remains a terrifying local mystery for two months.
That's when two men stumbled across the bodies of Carroll Jackson and his one year-old daughter Janet, dumped in a remote area of Fredericksburg, Virginia, hidden under some brush. A short time later, Mildred Jackson and her five-year-old daughter Susan were found buried in a shallow grave, just outside an abandoned building. Their bodies bore signs of torture and rape.
That location proved to be the break in the case—and a signal to authorities that a serial killer was on the loose.