
In 2000, Lee was convicted of fleeing from officers after attacking Green at a local lounge, and he was sentenced to two years in prison, according to the Associated Press.Ĭonnie Warner went missing from her home in Zachary, Louisiana in August 1992. In 1988, Lee married Jacqueline Denise Sims, and they had two children together. Lee also had a long-term girlfriend, Consandra Green, whom he sometimes lived with. Lee later described himself as a loner, and he also gained a reputation in his neighborhood as a “Peeping Tom” and was arrested multiple times throughout his life for voyeurism, stalking, and burglary, according to the Chicago Tribune. He dropped out in the 11th grade, according to court documents. Tests would reveal Lee had an IQ of 65, reported the Associated Press.

He did poorly in school, where he was enrolled in special education classes. Lee was primarily raised by his mother, and he grew up with 13 siblings and half-siblings. Mental illness ran in his family, and his father reportedly suffered from bipolar disorder and psychosis, according to Baton Rouge CBS affiliate WAFB. Francisville, Louisiana, a small town north of Baton Rouge. Lee, whose case is explored in Oxygen’s “ Mark of a Killer,” was born on Nov. 5, 1968 and raised in St. Known in the press as “The Baton Rouge Serial Killer,” his name was Derrick Todd Lee, and although he has been tied to seven deaths and convicted of two murders, the possibility exists he was responsible for more.

Preying on people’s kindness, he asked for directions or charmed them with a smile before forcing his way inside women’s homes to assault and murder them. In the early 2000s, a serial killer snaked his way through the communities of southern Louisiana.
