More than 30 bodies have been recovered from bayous across the Houston area this year, prompting widespread public concern and online speculation that a serial killer may be operating in the region, as reported by The New York Post.
Local authorities, however, are pushing back on those claims, saying the deaths stem from a range of unrelated causes.
According to the Houston Police Department, three bodies were recovered near bayous in Harris County last week alone.
Body #34 (since Jan 1, 2025) has now been pulled out of a bayou in Houston
Does Houston have a serial killer that no one is talking about? Cartel? Mob?
WTF is going on? pic.twitter.com/iI3Q3b9E1m
— Paul Robertson (@ShadeSalvo) December 26, 2025
Those discoveries brought the total number of bodies pulled from Houston-area waterways in 2025 to 34, just one short of the record set in 2024, according to reporting by the Houston Chronicle.
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The growing tally has fueled viral rumors and alarm among residents and visitors, particularly on social media platforms where theories of a serial killer have spread rapidly.
“The math isn’t mathing, I think there’s a serial killer,” Houston tourist Juan Sandoval told ABC 13.
“I get Nevada’s ‘for you’ page now, and even in Nevada, they’re talking about Buffalo Bayou, so it’s that bad, it’s reaching another state, across state lines.”
Sandoval’s friend, Erick Cortez, echoed those concerns.
“There must be someone out there, no?” Cortez said. “Because it’s ridiculous that so many people are dying in the bayou, I think it’s unfortunate that they haven’t found the person.”
Houston-area prosecutors and law enforcement officials have responded forcefully to those claims. Harris County District Attorney Sean Teare said there is no evidence to support the theory that a serial killer is responsible.
“There is nothing, nothing, and I want to be crystal clear, to indicate that there is someone operating here as a serial killer,” Teare told KPRC. “There are many reasons for these deaths. None of them are a serial killer.”
Teare noted that autopsy reports are still pending for two bodies recovered from the Buffalo Bayou on Dec. 22 and Dec. 24. Officials said conclusions will not be drawn until forensic examinations are complete.
Buffalo Bayou runs approximately 53 miles through Houston and connects to several other waterways, including Brays Bayou, Carpenters Bayou, Greens Bayou, Sims Bayou, and White Oak Bayou.
In total, Houston has an estimated 2,500 miles of bayous and waterways, creating a vast and complex network that often complicates investigations.
Another body has been found in a Houston bayou. This is the 32nd body recovered in Harris County bayous in 2025.
We’re along Buffalo Bayou near the intersection of N Crawford Street and Ruiz Street.
This is the site of a massive homeless encampment. We know that several… pic.twitter.com/AVp7mdlfD6
— Barbara (@bat52301) December 23, 2025
Teare attributed many of the deaths to factors including homelessness, mental health struggles, and substance abuse.
“It’s kind of a little-known fact, but when you get into the bayous, it is very difficult to get out,” Teare said.
“When you combine that with someone that is high on some substance, someone that is intoxicated somehow, it makes it even more difficult.”
“Yes, there are times where we recover bodies that were placed in the bayou criminally, no question,” he added. “But that is not something that is a regular occurrence.”
Medical examiner records obtained by KPRC show that nearly 200 bodies have been recovered from Houston’s bayous since 2017.
About 40 percent of those cases were ruled “undetermined,” meaning investigators could not definitively classify the deaths as accidental, suicidal, or homicidal.
Houston’s current unease is not the first time the region has faced serial killer fears.
An area near the Interstate 45 corridor in League City, roughly 25 miles southeast of Houston, became known as the Texas Killing Fields after 34 bodies of young women and girls were discovered there between 1971 and 2006.
Authorities later concluded the area had likely been used by multiple offenders over decades.
Officials say the current spike in bayou recoveries reflects Houston’s geography and social challenges, not a coordinated killing spree.
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