A serial killer in California, known as the “alphabet shorer”, convicted of killing four women in 2013, actually had 26 victims, his death series now claims.
Joseph Naso was sentenced and sentenced to death 12 years ago by the murders of Roxene Roggasch, Carmen Colon, Pamela Parsons and Tracy Tafoya, which took place in the 1970s and 1990s. The women’s first name and last names all began with the same letter and served the former photographer the haunting moniker.
According to a new one Oxygen Documentary, “Death Row Confidential: Secrets of a Serial Killer”, his killing count is reportedly much higher. Revelation came from another inmate in death series, William Noguera, who was enclosed with NASO in San Quentin State Prison. NASO remains on the death of the death until today and has not commented on the alleged killings.
“He is guilty of more murders than anyone knows. He told me everything, and I wrote it all down,” Noguera said in a preview of the series that is broadcast on September 13.
Noguera was part of a program to help older prisoners and got to know the NASO over a decade when he made bomb shell, he claimed.

“When I said to him,” see they got you because a list of 10, “he started laughing,” Noguera told the news site, KGO. “He said, ‘They got it all wrong. Yes, I killed them women, yes. But it’s not my top – it’s not my list of 10. That’s my top 10.’
According to KGOAt NASOS allegations of killing 26 women may be supported by evidence found in his home. “They found a coin collection with 26 gold heads. They represent his trophies, they represent the 26 women he murdered,” noguera Added.
After his dealings with NASO, Noguera composed a 300-page document with clues and partial confessions in the hope of leading investigators to several victims. The case was taken up by the retired FBI Task Force -Investigator Ken Mains, who also contains in Oxygen Documentary.

Roggasch, 18 and 22-year-old colon were killed by NASO in the 1970s, while 38-year-old Parsons and 31-year-old Tafoya were murdered in the 1990s. All four had been sex workers.
NASO, a father of two and a small league coach, was arrested in 2009 when police officers found evidence connecting him with the four crimes in his California home.
Stash included photographs of women’s lifeless bodies, a detailed list of references to the murders and a journal with graphic descriptions of rape and torture of other young women.
Despite this NASO, his innocence maintained and told the jury that he was “not the monster who killed these women” during his trial where he represented himself. Then California argued Deputy District Attorney Dori Ahana in favor of the death penalty, which was ultimately handed down.
Even according to his conviction, he had been suspected in the murder of at least two other women in California.