Todd Kohlhepp, Seven Murders, and the Institutions That Looked Away
In November 2016, deputies executing a search warrant on a remote South Carolina compound heard banging from inside a locked shipping container. What they found, a young woman chained by the neck, alive after sixty-five days of captivity, ended the double life of Todd Kohlhepp: licensed real estate broker, private pilot, top-selling agent, and one of the most prolific killers in South Carolina history.
Todd Kohlhepp, Seven Murders, and the Institutions That Looked Away reconstructs Kohlhepp's full criminal career across three decades: from a 1986 kidnapping and rape in Arizona that the justice system failed to adequately prosecute, through a cold-case mass murder at a motorcycle dealership in 2003, to the compound murders and prolonged captivity that finally exposed him. Drawing on court records, confession transcripts, forensic evaluations, and the extraordinary Amazon product reviews in which he described his crimes to a public that did not know it was reading them, this book tells the story of seven people killed and one woman who survived, and of the cascading institutional failures that made every death preventable.
This is not a story about a monster hiding in shadows. It is a story about a predator who operated in plain sight, and about what it costs when the systems designed to stop him are not built to see him.