


Maybe it was alcohol, maybe it was something else. It was then that Mannies and his friends contacted the FBI, an interview that lasted just under an hour, emphasizing that that the man they thought was Laundrie was alone, then telling the Feds, "He was visibly impaired. It's been decades since Derrick Todd Lee, who was linked to the murders of at least seven women, terrorized the Baton Rouge area. Louisiana had some trouble with serial killers in the late 90s. "My friend woke me up about seven in the morning, kept texting telling me to turn on the news," he says, "And I said, 'Oh, my God, that kind of of looks like.' And she interrupted me and said, 'That's the creepy guy at the bar!'" Derrick Todd Lee True Crime Murder Mystery - YouTube. After that he just sat there."Īnd it was after they returned home Mannies and friends realized who the stranger was. it's Brian.' That's as far as the encounter went. The lone man then told Mannies and his friends that he was from New York. A little later I felt this guy (staring) - I couldn't tell if he was mad or something, and finally he said something about stupid southerners and some expletives about Republicans." Serial Killer Derrick Todd Lee Dies In Louisiana Hospital Lee, who fell ill over the weekend, died at the hospital where he was rushed for medical treatment. Derrick Todd Lee, 34 stands before Fulton County (Ga.) Superior Court Judge Richard Hicks in Atlanta, Wednesday, May 28, 2003. "There was one lone guy sitting at the end of the bar," says Mannies, describing how his the stranger inserted himself into the conversation, "(The conversation) sort of led into politics.
