Mayor’s Shocking Denial Amidst Growing Horrors: Is the Serial Killer Still at Large in Our Bayous?
So here we are, Houston—a city wrestling with not one, not two, but sixteen mysterious bayou deaths this year alone. Now, doesn’t that set off a little alarm bell in your head? Some are whispering the word ‘serial killer,’ yet Mayor John Whitmire is adamant: no evidence, no serial killer. Instead, he points the finger at drugs, alcohol, and homelessness, calling these drownings “not a new phenomenon.” But here’s the kicker—families of the victims, like Lauren Freeman and Kenneth Cutting Sr., aren’t buying that soothing explanation. They see it as outright gaslighting, a refusal to face a chilling possibility or maybe something even more sinister lurking beneath those murky waters. So, what’s the real story? Are we missing clues or just drowning in denial? Let’s dive in and unravel this unsettling mystery. LEARN MORE
A city mayor has been accused of ‘gaslighting’ Houston amid fears of a serial killer, following the discovery of a 16th body being pulled from a bayou.
16 bayou deaths have been reported in the Harris County area so far this year, an alarming figure which has prompted some speculation that a serial killer may be on the loose.
Houston mayor John Whitmire has previously shut down these claims, saying earlier this month: “We do not have any evidence that there is a serial killer loose in Houston, Texas.”
The mayor called the drownings ‘not a new phenomenon’, blaming drugs, alcohol and homelessness for the tragic deaths.
“Unfortunately the homeless, when they pass, often end up in the bayou.” he said in a press briefing earlier this month.
However, Lauren Freeman, who lost her cousin Kenneth Cutting Jr. earlier this year, claimed the mayor is ‘gaslighting’ the city of Houston following his recent comments.

The mayor has been accused of ‘gaslighting’ an entire city (Bob Levey/Getty Images for Houston Hispanic Chamber of Commerce)
Kenneth Cutting Sr., the victim’s father, added to Fox News Digital: “All them people didn’t commit suicide or fall into the bayou accidentally and drown. It’s ridiculous.
“There’s been so many of ’em in the last three years.”
UNILAD has reached out to Whitmire’s office for comment.
Cutting was nowhere to be seen after a night out in Houston back in June, with police pulling his body from the bayou just days later.
An autopsy looking into Cutting’s death found no external injuries, while a toxicology report concluded there were no drugs in his system.
Kenneth Cutting Sr. added to Fox News Digital: “Something happened to my son. My son didn’t fall into the bayou and drown.”

16 bayou deaths have been reported in the Harris County area so far this year (Jill Karnicki/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)
Meanwhile, Freeman added: “Either there’s a serial killer on the loose, or the scum of society have realized they can start dumping bodies in the bayou in the midst of the heat and they start decomposing so nobody gets caught. You just can’t stab them or shoot them.”
Anthony Curry’s body was one of those to be discovered this year, with his death ruled as accidental drowning, with an examination finding PCP and ethanol in his system.
Curry’s family are also looking for answers, with his sister, Alexis Curry, telling Click 2 Houston: “That ain’t my brother. He’ll go somewhere and chill off before he just go jump in some water.”
Alexis described her brother as her ‘superhero’, and said she had no idea how his body could have ended up in the bayou.
“I really want to know what happened,” she added.
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