Four Bodies in Barrels… and the “Chameleon Killer” Hiding in Plain Sight

Some cases don’t begin with a scream… but with a quiet discovery in the middle of nowhere.

The Bear Brook Murders are one of them.

On November 10, 1985, a hunter walking through Bear Brook State Park in New Hampshire stumbled upon a rusted steel drum hidden in the woods.

Inside were two bodies.

Dismembered.

Wrapped in plastic.

Reduced to bones.

No names. No identities.

Just a question: who were they… and who did this?

They were buried nearby under a single, haunting inscription—known only to God.

And then, the case went silent.

No suspect. No answers.

Fifteen years passed.

On May 9, 2000, another barrel was found in the same area.

Inside were two more bodies.

Same method.

Same brutality.

By then, one thing was clear—this wasn’t an isolated crime.

It was a pattern.

But the killer still had no name.

For decades, the case became known simply as the “Bear Brook Murders.”

Four victims.

Zero identities.

Until 2017, when technology finally caught up with the past.

Using genetic genealogy, investigators identified the man behind it all: Terry Rasmussen.

A man with many names.

Bob Evans.

Larry Vanner.

Curtis Kimball.

Each name a different life.

Each life a disguise.

Rasmussen had a long history of minor crimes—fraud, theft, child abandonment.

But nothing that fully revealed what he truly was.

In 2002, he was convicted of murdering his girlfriend, Eunsoon Jun, in California.

Her body was dismembered and hidden in her own home.

He pleaded guilty.

But even then, no one connected him to Bear Brook.

Not until DNA did.

One of the victims… was his own daughter.

But the others?

Still unknown.

Then, in 2018, a podcast reignited the case.

A librarian named Rebekah Heath began researching on her own.

No badge. No authority.

Just persistence.

She followed fragments of information online until a name surfaced: Sarah McWaters.

That name led to a missing family—Marlyse Honeychurch and her two daughters, Marie and Sarah.

They had vanished decades earlier.

The last man seen with them?

Bob Evans.

Terry Rasmussen.

At the same time, genetic genealogist Barbara Rae-Venter used advanced DNA techniques to confirm their identities.

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In 2019, three of the four victims were finally named.

After more than 30 years.

But one victim remains unknown.

A young girl.

Rasmussen’s daughter.

Still without a name.

The Bear Brook case is not just about a killer.

It’s about how one man lived multiple lives, slipping through systems, changing identities, disappearing before anyone could stop him.

A “chameleon killer.”

And it’s about the victims—erased, hidden, forgotten… until someone refused to let them stay that way.

Even now, with the killer identified and most victims named, the story isn’t finished.

Because one question still lingers—

Who was the last girl… and how many others were never found?