The Mad Butcher, Cleveland Torso Killer - Still Unsolved ?? Mystery and Makeup | Bailey Sarian

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- Hi friends, how are you today? I know we're in a weird location,  we're in my living room/dining area, but it kind of makes me feel like I’m  normal, like I’m a real person, right? Like I feel real. Come on dogs. (claps) Come on dogs, please stop. Hi friends, how are you today? My name is Bailey Sarian. We are currently in my living/dining area because I was trying to redo my background, to make it more like Christmassy  and I decided that I hated it, it's not what I visioned it to be, you know? So I was like "Okay let me do it in  front of the Christmas tree and stuff", 'cause yes my Christmas tree is up, yeah. What are you gonna do about it? Today is Monday, which means it's  Murder, Mystery & Makeup Monday! (theme song) If you are new here, hi, how are you? My name is Bailey Sarian,  and on Mondays I sit down and I talk about true crime  story that's been heavy on my... (tongue click) Noggin! And -- I’m out of breath. (slight laugh) I do my makeup at the same time. If you're interested in true  crime and you like makeup, I would highly suggest you  hit that subscribe button, 'cause I’m here for you on Mondays. Last week I got sick, again. Yes, sorry huh. So today I want to do a special  giveaway, I hit three million subscribers and I can't say thank you enough,  it means more than you know. I low-key hate doing giveaways because  I wanna give everybody something and it makes me feel bad that I can't, but  I should just shut up and do one anyways. But I do want you guys to know  that I so greatly appreciate you and I really can't say thank you enough. It's been a very weird year, but  like this, this has been incredible? I don't know, I don't know,  I don't have the right words, but I just want you to know  that I’m so grateful for you and I hope you know that. I just really appreciate you. Way to go. (slight laugh) No but I do, I’m just awkward okay. So I want to do a special giveaway  and it's a good one, okay? But I’m going to tell you what it is and  how to enter at the end of the video, so don't forget to check that out. I know it's annoying, you're  probably just going to skip to it, that's fine, okay? That's fine, whatever. But my intro is already kind of  long, 'cause I ramble too much, so it'll be at the end of the video. It's a good giveaway! Before we jump into today's  story, we do have a sponsor, I filmed it in my last  background, don't get scared. Today's video is sponsored by CASETiFY. ♫ CASETiFY ♫ CASETiFY, if you don't know,  is a tech accessory brand specializing in unique and protective phone cases, and also AirPod cases, watch bands,  and many other tech accessories. Their impact cases are engineered with a  two-layer construction of QI-tech technology, and they also are drop test approved for  like drops up to more than, I’m sorry, for drops up to 6.6 feet. 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Again go to Caseify.com/BaileySarian  and get 20% off your new phone case, or like a gift, 20% off a new  gift, phone case to somebody. I made that more complicated than it needed to be. Thank you CASETiFY for partnering  with me on today's video, but most of all big thank you to you guys, because without you I wouldn't be  here right now, I just appreciate you. Okay, we're back, wow. So, today I do have to add a warning. Warning: following presentation  is intended for mature audiences. It contains graphic descriptions of crime scenes, adult dialogue and strong language. Viewer discretion is advised. Oh my god, I forgot brushes, ugh. ♫ Lord help me ♫ Last upload we talked about  The Black Dahlia, remember? Well today's story is kind of like, I technically should have done it before The Black Dahlia story, I guess it would have been a good like  lead-in, but I didn't so it's okay. It's about the Cleveland  Torso Killer, today's story. And it is... It's intense. So during the 1930s, Cleveland was  a city on the rise, Cleveland, Ohio. The population continued to  grow and became a melting pot of laborers needed to support  our steel and manufacturing base. Now despite the effects of the great depression, people were beginning to get on their feet again, but during this time, one of the most prolific  and gruesome serial killers of all time carried out acts of horror, which led to one  of the biggest unsolved crimes in history. Yeah, unsolved baby. So the place? Lake Erie, it's near Cleveland, Ohio. The year is 1934, the month September. What seems to be a woman's body  washes up the shore of Lake Erie. What was found was a woman's torso, with her thigh still attached  but amputated at the knees. It was believed that she may have  been covered in some sort of chemical, which left her skin really red, tough,  and textured, almost like leather. The authorities searched the area,  locating a few other body parts, but her head was never found. It was believed that this woman  had been around her mid-30s, but authorities were really unable  to identify who she was exactly. Sadly, she would be referred  to as "The Lady Of The Lake", but with no leads or clues,  the case really just went cold. Like where was the head, you know? Jeez. So about a year later, in an  area called Kingsbury Run, it's along the east side of Cleveland, two more bodies had been found  in a very similar fashion. Now Kingsbury Run once  contained a natural watershed that drains storm water into the nearby river, but in the 1930s it was said  to this area was considered a rough part of town, and a lot  of crime was happening as well. During the great depression, many  families, they had lost everything. One out of four families didn't  have any source of income, many of them ended up living in very terrible  conditions, like just really, really sad. Now this area, the Kingsbury Run, it was  said to be covered in just trash and waste, and many people built little homes  out of mud and the trash in the area. Now close by to Kingsbury Run, there was this area called Roaring-- (slight laugh) Roaring is like one of those words I really cant-- Roaring Third, which this area had a lot of-- Not a lot, but a few different bars, brothels, and also gambling dens, and also a flophouse, where people were constantly coming as going, because it was really close to  a train station out of town. So there would be lots of people  coming from all over, passing by, and then they would stop in this area. In September 1935, two teenage boys,  they were walking around in the area, and they discovered what seemed to  be a decapitated body of a male. So the authorities go out there,  they go out to the scene, right? And what they find is indeed a decapitated male. They see that the body was naked,  he's just wearing a pair of socks, there were rope burns around each of his wrists, also the victim's body was drained of  all blood, does that not sound familiar? It was drained of all blood. There was no blood on the body. There was no like smudge marks of blood. There was no blood! Nothing around the scene,  it was clean, it was weird, it was real suspish, okay? Where's the blood? Where's the head? Where's the head? Sadly, also, the lower area of this victim. You know. It was cut off. So the head and the wei was missing. Now the coroner determined that the  cause of death had been decapitation. Fingerprints, it did help identify the  victim as 28-year-old Edward Andrassy. At the crime scene, police are  kinda looking around the area, trying to find any type of clues,  evidence, something, right? That will help them put the pieces together as to what happened to this victim, but when they're searching  the area they don't find-- Well they do find something Bailey. What do they find? They find another body. There was another body! Now this victim also, his  head, he was decapitated, and his lower area was cut off. So it's clear to the police that, you know, it was probably done by the same person. Now this is when the police  start connecting some dots, because that's when they noticed that  on the second victim that they find, it appeared that he had some kind of chemical put on his skin in the same  way The Lady Of The Lake was, because his skin was also red,  rough, and super leathery. It was apparent that this victim had  been dead for at least a couple of weeks, whereas the first victim that they found  nearby, it seemed like his was more newer. It was like, it wasn't sitting there for as long. Sadly though, they were unable to identify  who this victim was, the second one. So that's when police start, you know, figuring that they're probably  dealing with a serial killer, a really sick one at that. So then in January of 1936,  a lady's out doing her thing, minding her own business, okay? She comes across two baskets  that are sitting alongside this manufacturing building  she's walking in front of. So she sees these two baskets, and  they seem to be filled with like newspaper or something, like  something's wrapped in them, right? So she kind of goes and takes a look inside, maybe it's money ,that's  what I would think, you know? And she sees something that's like  wrapped in a bunch of newspapers. So she's feeling a little curious,  she opens it up, what does she see? She sees that wrapped inside the newspaper  seemed to be like human body parts. She wasn't sure as to like  what she was looking at, but it was clear that it was  like skin and just parts, oh yes. "Why'd I look in there?". So authorities come out to the area, and they see that it is indeed-- (slight laugh) I'm not laughing because of that,  I’m laughing because of how like awkward I am sometimes. They see that it's a woman's body parts  wrapped up in these baskets, it's a woman. So they search the area,  they're not finding anything. Now they have um like people  going out and searching the area over the next couple of days, in hopes  to just find something, anything right? And about 10 days after finding the victim's body, that's when they were able  to recover most of her body that was cut up and scattered around. It was scattered around just in different areas, hidden in like some bushes over here, and then in the baskets over  here, like it was very strange. But they were unable to locate her head. Missing, yeah. Where the hell is that? I don't know. So similar to the other victim  we had talked about, Edward, the coroner also determined that this  victim had died from decapitation. The cause of death had been decapitation. With this victim though, it was a  little different, it was a little odd because the killer, whoever it was, they waited. They waited for the rigor mortis to set in before dismembering the rest of the body, whereas the previous victims, whoever  was responsible, didn't do this. They're thinking like-- This is gonna sound inappropriate, but  it's kind of what they're thinking. It's almost like a little science  project going on or something, like maybe the killer wanted to see what  happened, like trying something new. Who freaking knows. So fingerprints were taken  from this victim as well, and they were able to ID her as a  woman named "Florence" or "Flo". She worked in the area as a waitress, a barmaid, and she also worked as a sex worker, and she lived right on the  edge of the Roaring Third, so right where a lot of  people were coming and going. So it's like "Oh s--t". Could have been someone who just left town. Investigators were feeling like  they had to kind of like work fast, because the person in the area could easily flee. So I mean, investigators are doing their thing, they're questioning as many people as they can, but nothing is coming from it,  no leads, no clues, nothing. So then in June 1936, early in  the morning in Kingsbury Run, two boys, they decided that they  were gonna skip school, you know? "Let's go hang out and walk around.”  because they don't know what else to do. So they're walking around the  area, and then they come across what seems to be, you guessed it-- No, they come across a pair of  trousers, there's trousers on the floor, but that they see that there's  something wrapped in it, okay? So being the little curious  cats that they were, they go up and they kind of open up the trousers,  and they see that it was a head of a male. So okay these boys find the  head, they report it to police, and they take it in, they take the  victim's head, and hopefully find an ID. But the very next day, police,  they find the body of a man, another man, who seemed to be in his 20s, and he was dumped in front of the police building. Again the body was super clean,  it was drained of all blood, but this time the body was fully intact, like not cut up like the previous victims, but once again he was decapitated. The victim's fingerprints were taken, but sadly they were unable to identify who he was. With this victim, he had six very distinct  tattoos on various parts of his body, now hoping, police were hoping that this  would help identify who he was, right? So they put out there in the  newspapers and stuff like "Hey, if you know someone with  this tattoo let me know.". So they put his tattoos out there in hopes that somebody will come  forward and say, "That's so and so", but again sadly this victim would just be known as "The Tattooed Man", and he was never identified. Nobody knew who this man was. Oh my gosh, I’m just having  like a light bulb moment. Because the train station was so close by, do you think maybe the killer  was bringing in people? No, that'd be silly. It's probably just people from out of town. I feel like that would be too much work. Okay, not a lightbulb moment, but it's a thought. So then July 1936, a teenage girl  was walking through the woods and came across a decapitated man. First of all, I’m not sure  why all these kids are just walking around alone in the woods and stuff. So this victim seemed to be in his 40s, and appeared to be dead for about two months. The previous victims that had been found, they seemed to be killed in different locations, and then they were dropped around the town, or in the area that the killer left them at. But with this victim it was different. It was believed that this  victim was killed on the spot, maybe this person saw something  he wasn't supposed to see, because nearby was a pile of bloody clothing, and there was a large amount of blood  that had seeped into the ground, which led authorities to believe  that he was killed on the spot, I mean it was clear as day. His head and the bloody clothing was found nearby, like it was right next to the body  pretty much, but it was just different. I personally am leaning towards like, maybe they witnessed something,  and the killer had to-- Didn't have to, but you know, he felt  like "Well I gotta get rid of you now.". So then in September 1936, a  man is walking to the train, he's gonna catch a train so  he can get out of town, right? So he's walking and then he trips,  and he looks back to see like "What the hell did I just trip over?", right? And he's looking, and he sees like  what seems to be a man's torso. He tripped over a man's torso. Yeah, that sounds really weird,  but based off of what I was reading and some of the pictures I  saw, there seemed to be-- Or like the area was really bad, and they  were just like piles of trash everywhere. And the torso wasn't just like laying out  in the open with like nothing around it, where you couldn't miss it, you know? It was just kind of like  buried, or kind of mixed in with all the mess that was  going on in the area, so yeah. 'Cause when I was reading that, I was  like "He tripped over a man's torso?". So this man, he was just trying  to get out of town and is walking, trips, look back, "What is that?", man's torso. Police went out there, they  searched the area, right? And nearby is like this large pool. So it's like, when you're walking  there's a lot of the trash, and debris, and everything, right? And then nearby is like this huge pool, which was said to be nothing  more than just a big open sewer. "Someone's gotta check that, who's gonna  check that?", police are thinking this. "I'm not checking that, you're checking  that. You're going in there. Mhm.", they’re like "That's your job". But eventually, they got a  diver to come out to the area and dive into this large pool that was  pretty much a sewer, like it was rough. And they're searching this area because they're thinking that maybe, you know, the rest of this man's body  parts could be in there, right? Now this brought on a lot of onlookers, people want to know what the heck's going on. Now the media was reporting about  the bodies being found and whatnot, and kind of keeping everyone up  to date about what was going on. So a lot of the people knew like,  nobody knew who this killer was, and these bodies are being  found, you get it, okay. When they see people in the area,  they see police searching the pool, they're like "Oh jeez". So everyone's like huddling  around this pool thing, not even huddling because it  was a lot of people who came. It was said that up to like 600 people  showed up to see what police found. So they're all just like watching. Now in this pool, they were able to recover the lower half of the torso  and parts of both legs. Now at this point they were  on to victim number six, who was believed to be in his late  20s, who again was decapitated. The coroner takes a look at  this victim, and had noted that there was a lack of hesitation marks on the body, which made them believe that whoever  had done this was very strong, but also a very confident killer,  who had to be very familiar with the human anatomy. Which is really interesting  when you think about it, that the coroner was able to tell  that the person who had done this, didn't hesitate when they  were cutting up the body. I found that really interesting. It may sound morbid, welcome  to my channel, I guess. But wow, it's something  you just don't think about, or I didn't, I don't know. Anyway, so it was noted that the  victim's head had been cut off with just like one bold, clean stroke, which  said that is what killed the victim instantly. Sadly though, they were unable  to identify this victim as well. Now at this point they were, again,  at six killings in just one year, not even just like normal  killings, which are still awful, but these were very intense killings, right? Where are the damn heads? They had no clues, no  suspects, nothing to go off of. The local newspapers were reporting  on the killings almost daily, and the fact that they had no suspects  created a lot of tension in the area. Well a lot of tension and  a lot of fear, I would say. Some sicko is out here just chopping up people and you guys are lollygagging,  the police, they're lollygagging, like why haven't they got anyone? The media started referring to  whoever was doing this, the killer, they were calling him the "Mad Butcher", and other than calling him the Mad  Butcher, that's really all they had. They had nothing, nothing. You know, sometimes I think  back, not even think back, I’ll be like sitting on a toilet  minding my own business, right? And I’m like "How did they  even solve crimes back then?", unless they caught him right away, you could get away with so much though back then, not that that's a good thing but it just-- I don't know how they did it, I really don’t. The mayor steps in, and he  appoints a new safety director named Elliot Ness to get involved into the case, he's gonna be like the lead main investigator guy, he's gonna solve the crime. Together, they put this group of people, the police, the coroner, and a bunch of experts, they come together, and they  create some kind of profile to who they're looking for. Some of the police also went undercover and started hanging around the Roaring Third listening into conversations,  they were talking to people acting like they're gambling-- They probably were gambling, like. But they were just trying to  talk to people and figure out, you know, what's the inside scoop. The police would say over time that they had interviewed up to  like almost 5,000 people, okay? They were trying, they were talking to everybody. And it would soon become, or at least turn into, the biggest police investigation  in Cleveland history. They were questioning any and everybody, and they still came up with nothing. I don't think they were  asking the right questions. I mean, don't you think somebody  would have said something? People like to talk, people love talking, especially when they know something. I feel like somebody would have said something, out of 5,000, nothing? Well the killings continue,  and in February of 1937 a man finds the upper half of a  woman's torso washed up on the shore, unlike the previous victims this cause of death, or her cause of death, had not been decapitation. It was believed that she was  decapitated after she was dead, see before it was like the  decapitation is what killed the person, now it was believed that the killer didn't  chop off her head until after she was dead. So the torso was found,  and then three months later the lower half of this victim's  torso had also washed ashore, but again, she was unable to be identified. June 1937, a teenager, a teenage boy, he's out walking, and he gets  to like under a bridge area, and under this bridge, that's  where he finds a human skull, next to the human skull was a burlap  bag containing skeletal remains. Now police take in the, you know,  the skeletal remains and whatnot, and they are able to determine  that this was a 40-year-old woman, and her dental records were able  to identify her as Rose Wallace. 'Cause they were able to get  her name, they were able to... Trying to get anything, something, s--t. Nothing came from it. I mean there's bodies everywhere. July 1937, a national guardsman saw  the first limb of the next victim in the wake of a passing tugboat. Over the next few days police recovered  the entire body from the river, but once again the head was never located. With this victim they saw that  the abdomen had been gutted and the heart was ripped out. Also this victim was never identified. I don't know what kind of  science project was going on, but holy moly, what the hell. What was this person doing? Just keeping a bunch of heads, oh my gosh. So then for a minute, things  just kind of went quiet, not sure why, but like nothing  happened for almost a year, no new victims were being found,  which is good, but it was like "Okay this is finally over.  Did the killer leave town?". But as the months passed, it seemed like "Okay, I think, I think it's over", nae-nae. No of course not, because then in April of 1938, that's right, maybe the killer like  went out of town for something, a business meeting or whatever, I don't know, we don't know but he was back in town, and I shouldn't say he, but I have a feeling. April 1938, a man on his way to work saw what he thought was a dead  fish along the riverbanks, oh it wasn't a dead fish though. He gets up to it, right? It's not dead fish, of  course it's not a dead fish, it was the lower half of a woman's  leg, not even the full leg, just like the shin and the calf and whatnot. Jeez. And then about a month later,  police pulled two burlap bags out of the river containing both parts  of the torso, and most of the legs, but this time the coroner was able to  detect drugs in the victim's system. Drugs. So this could provide some answers, okay? Because they're thinking like, "Did the victim take the drugs themselves?" "Were the drugs given to her? Maybe  that could kind of give some clues.". The coroner thought if they  could find the victim's arms it might give further answers, but  unfortunately the victim's arms were never located, and she was never identified. So August 18th, 1938 a victim's torso was found wrapped in a man's blue blazer. It's wrapped in a blue blazer, and then it's wrapped again in like an old quilt. The legs and the arms were  discovered in a makeshift box, it was wrapped in like brown butcher paper, and it was held together with rubber bands , kind of more creative than  the other bodies, right? Or the other victims. Like, I wonder what that's about actually. This victim was also decapitated, and the head it was wrapped on its own separately, but it was wrapped up in the same way. Now it was noted on this victim  that some of the parts look like as if they had been refrigerated  or put in like a refrigerator. I don't know why I keep covering my mouth, sorry. But while searching for more evidence, that's when police discovered the  remains of another freaking body, yeah. Bodies, on bodies, on bodies. Like just a lot of bodies going on. But there was another body just yards away. Now these two victims were never identified. Now do you remember Elliot Ness? I like mentioned him earlier today. Now Elliot Ness was the one  who was like, the main guy, the main investigator on this case. Elliot was famous himself, and he was most famous for bringing down Al Capone, yeah. So he was pretty known, especially by criminals. But it seemed like the killer was  definitely taunting Elliot at this point. It was in plain view, another body. Elliot at this point was  like "Okay, game on b---h.", no, I was kidding, he didn't say that. But Elliott round-- Yeah, he probably did actually, because he pulls the douchiest move of all time. Elliott deserves douche of the year, because he rounded up about 35  police officers and detectives, and his plan was for them to go search  for the killer in the hobo jungles, that's what they called this area,  where all the rundown houses were out and all the homeless people are living. He, Elliot was believing that this  is where the killer was living. So all these police officers,  they raided through the Run. They were going from place to  place, arresting around 63 men. While police and firemen searched the  deserted shanties for evidence or clues, Elliott at this time was seeing  red, whoever this killer was, was taunting him, and his ego is  probably just a little bruised. What does an angry man do? Well he's like "Let me call  police and tell them really quick" "to set the shacks on fire and  burn down the town to the ground ". So Elliot calls for a police  and firemen to go out there and set these shacks on fire, and  just burn the whole section down. This is where like all the homeless  people are living, and you know, the great depression had  happened a couple years prior. People are not really fully back on their feet, a lot of them are just  living in these little shacks because it's really all they could do. They can't go anywhere, they  don't have money to go anywhere, this is where they're living, and  Elliot is has them burn it all down, like these people already had nothing. They do it, they burn it down, the whole thing gets burned down to the ground, and then Elliot's like "Yay, fixed it". So the newspapers are  reporting on all this, right? The people of the town were angry, a lot of them were very angry  with Elliot for what he had done, he was heavily criticized for his actions. People knew that the raid would  do nothing to solve the murders, burning down people's homes did nothing, if anything, you just burned down  evidence that may have been there. Now many were saying, or at least thinking, they were thinking that whoever  was responsible for these murders, had to be someone who was familiar  with the human anatomy, right? That's what the coroner said. Well, in order to be familiar  with the human anatomy, you would think this person may be a doctor or something along those lines, right? So many thought that like,  if this were to be true, what are the odds that the killer would be living in one of the run-down homes in that area? Whoever was responsible needed more room to drain the bodies of their blood, right? Cut them up, etc. etc. People are thinking "You just  burned down a whole area" "and ruined all these people's lives, for what?" "There's no way the person could live in there". I think Elliot just used this opportunity to get rid of the homeless population, that was probably like an  eyesore for him or something, that's just my own personal opinion, not a fact. After the area had been burned down, the killings had stopped completely,  so maybe he did live in the area? No, I don't think so. But I also forgot to mention that eventually the-- Not eventually-- Yeah, eventually, the media  gave this killer the name "The Cleveland Torso Killer". So the Cleveland torso case ends with a letter addressed to the chief  of police on December 21st, 1931. Let me tell you what this  letter said, it's typed out, it's typed not written or anything, and it says "Chief of Police,  You can rest easy now" "as I have come out to sunny  California for the winter." "I felt bad operating on those  people but science must advance." "Just laboratory guinea pigs  found on any public street. "No one missed them when I failed." "Right now I have a volunteer who  will absolutely prove my theory." "They called me mad and a butcher  but the "truth will out"". "The body has not been found and never will be" "but the head minus features is  buried in a gully on Century Blvd." "between Eastern and Century Crenshaw." "I feel it is my duty to  dispose of the bodies I do." "It is god's will not to let them suffer.", that's the last they had heard of  this Cleveland Torso Killer, right? From this letter. Now eight years after, this is when  Elizabeth Short, "The Black Dahlia" is found, dead in sunny California, with the same markings of The Cleveland Torso Killer. She, like if you remember in my last video, was drained of all blood, she was cut in half, similar to the victims out in Cleveland, Ohio, and this is why a lot of people  believe that The Cleveland Torso Killer is the final suspect in this case. Who knows, who really knows. In July of 1939, a 52-year-old man, named frank, confessed to the murder of "Flo". Frank said that he had lived with Flo, and had been acquainted with two  other victims, Edward, and Rose, but his confession turned  out to be all over the place. His story was flip-flopping, and  almost seemed rehearsed, practiced. They took him in, they booked him, and  he sat in jail waiting for his trial, but before he would appear in court,  Frank was found dead in his jail cell, he hanged himself, or did he? What appeared to be a suicide,  left people with more questions, a lot more questions, okay? Because during the autopsy,  was revealed that Frank had six broken ribs, and  Frank was five foot eight, but hanged himself from a hook only  five foot seven inches off of the floor, with six broken ribs, like that’s a little weird. Many people did not think  Frank was the killer, okay? That police forced him to  confess, because people wanted, you know, someone in jail for all these murders. So Frank is the one that got hit with it, and then maybe they killed him before trial, because like the broken ribs had to  happen while in police custody, but why? So these murders, they just  remain one big mystery, nothing has been solved from it. I mean, nobody knows what the hell was going on, there are so many rumors out  there as who the killer may be, but there's been no solid leads as to who it was. Eliot Ness believed whoever the killer was, continued to taunt him for years  after the killings had stopped, he would get letters, he would  get pictures, it led him nowhere. The biggest bummer of all, is that all  official police records on this case have been destroyed, or they were lost. Never been solved and all the files are gone, so it's like, that's it, you know? Many believe that The Cleveland  Torso Killer moved out west, and then that's when this person  may have killed Elizabeth Short. We may never know who this person was, and what the hell they were doing exactly. And it's disturbing, like  this one's really disturbing, because I don't know. Once you start chopping  people up, I just feel like... That my friends is a story about  The Cleveland Torso Killer, whoever the hell that was. If you know or if you have any information, maybe you were related to  this person, let us know-- Well don't let me know, let  the police know first, okay? And then come back and let me  know, but no tell the police. But yeah, I mean it just remains one big mystery. Man this one is so wild. I would love to hear your  thoughts and theories down below. Do you think The Cleveland Torso Killer may have been the one who killed  "The Black Dahlia", Elizabeth Short? Thank you guys so much for  hanging out with me today. A big thank you to CASETiFY for  partnering with me on today's video. I wanted to do a giveaway for  hitting three million subscribers, and just as a thank you, and I wish I could give each and every one of you something. Today's giveaway is so great,  oh my gosh let me tell you, I had to make a note of what's in this giveaway. So in this giveaway, you can win  the Estate Cosmetics and me palette. I did a collab with Estate Cosmetics and came out with this cute  little eyeshadow palette. So you can win that, plus two liquid lipsticks, two glosses, one eyeliner, two highlighters, which is over a hundred-dollar  value from Estate Cosmetics, we also have the LOUD Lacquer nail  polish sets, both of the collections, so the new one, the Aqua Tofana collection, plus the last one I did, which was the  Murder, Mystery, Makeup collection. They're fantastic nail polishes. Also we have some merch, yes merch, and then we have Hunt A Killer is offering a six-month subscription to the winner, yes, yes! And you also get a cocktail  book, and a cocktail mug, and then also, I’m going to sprinkle  in some skincare goodies from Murad. Ooooo! So, you can win all of this all you  have to do is like this video, be subscribed and leave a comment down below telling me what your favorite color is. Thank you, guys, so much. I hope you had a fantastic  thanksgiving holiday, or whatever. It was my birthday, I forgot it was my birthday. I hope you have a wonderful  rest of your day ahead. Please be safe out there. Wear a mask. Make good choices. Let me know if you like this new background, there's a lot on my to-do list. Have a good rest of your day, make good choices, and I’ll be seeing you guys later. Bye. (suspicious music)
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Channel: Bailey Sarian
Views: 6,705,563
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: bailey sarian, giveaway, mystery and makeup, mystery makeup monday, monday makeup mystery, mystery makeup, mystery makeup story, story time, true crime, unsolved, buzzfeed unsolved, bailey, makeup tutorial, christmas makeup, green eyeshadow tutorial, new makeup 2020, new makeup, mystery
Id: YkmlPaGui5k
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 37min 30sec (2250 seconds)
Published: Mon Nov 30 2020
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