In 1985, a hunter out in New Hampshire's Bear Brook State Park made a shocking discovery. He found the remains of a woman in her mid-20s to early 30s and a young girl, both beaten, wrapped in plastic, and stuffed into a metal drum. Police were unable to identify the two victims and the case went cold.

In May 2000, a detective decided to reopen the case and visit the scene. To everyone's horror, two more victims were found about 300 feet away from the first two. They, too, were concealed in a metal drum, and while their COD was undetermined, it did date back to the same time period as the first two victims.

They were much younger than the first child, one was between 2 and 4 years old and the other was only 1 to 3 years old. DNA testing concluded that two of the children were maternally related to the woman, the third could have been a paternal half-sister or cousin to the other children. The identities of the family remain unknown. There was nothing in the database to link the girls to a father, a missing person's report, or any other family members.

Then, in 2016, DNA connected convict Terry Peder Rasmussen to one of the toddlers unearthed back in 2000. At the time of discovery, Rasmussen - referred to as a "Chameleon" - went by many aliases, including "Bob Evans." He is suspected in more than half a dozen missing person cases but passed while incarcerated in 2010.

In June 2019, authorities announced the identies of the woman and two of the children: Marlyse Elizabeth Honeychurch, and her two children, Marie Elizabeth Vaughn and Sarah Lynn McWaters. Librarian and amateur sleuth Rebekah Heath broke the case by cross-referencing missing persons databases. The third girl remains unidentified, though she is the daughter of Rasmussen. Authorities hope to identify the girl's mother, but they feel confident, given his previous convictions and ties to Honeychurch, that Rasmussen is responsible for her and her daughters' demises.