Solved Murders - True Crime Stories - Inside the Mind of a Monster Larry Moor’s Threats, Murders, and Legacy of Fear #79
Episode Date: August 8, 2025#horrorstories #reddithorrorstories #ScaryStories #creepypasta #horrortales #truecrime #serialkiller #psychologicalhorror #legacyoffear #murdermystery This narrative explores the disturbing psyche o...f Larry Moor, revealing the motives behind his violent acts and the trauma he inflicted on victims and communities. It’s a haunting journey into the darkness of a monster’s mind and the lingering fear that continues to haunt long after the crimes. #horrorstories #reddithorrorstories #scarystories #horrorstory #creepypasta #horrortales #truecrime #serialkiller #psychologicalhorror #murdermystery #darkmind #legacyoffear #criminalpsychology #crimeinvestigation #fear #darklegacy #twistedmind #evil #violentcrimes #crimehistory
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Larry Moore isn't exactly the kind of name you want to hear in casual conversation.
If you don't know who he is, you're either lucky or very, very new to British crime news.
The guy is basically the embodiment of a walking nightmare.
Ten years ago, this twisted creep got thrown in HMP Wakefield for what officials called a
slew of sex attacks, but that hardly begins to describe the hell he put people through.
Officially, 15 women came forward.
unofficially.
Cops say he could be responsible for dozens more assaults, not to mention possibly being
tied to a few disappearances and unsolved murders scattered across the UK.
It's that bad.
Anyway, fast forward to the present day.
A journalist named Oliver Walton decides to pay more a visit at Wakefield, which, by the
way, is one of the most secure prisons in the UK.
This isn't some casual sit-down with a petty criminal, this is a one-year-one.
this is a one-on-one with a man who has left deep scars across multiple lives.
Walton's working on a documentary, trying to get a clearer picture of who Moore really is,
what makes a man like that tick. What he got instead? A chilling, completely unhinged threat
that no one saw coming. During their interview, Moore looked Walton dead in the eye and said he was
going to break out of prison and castrate all 15 of his victims. Yep. Let that sink in for a second.
Not only is the guy utterly devoid of remorse, but he's also still nursing his hatred,
his need for control, like it's some sacred mission. This wasn't just a wild, off-the-cuff rant.
Walton said it was cold, calculated, like more genuinely believed he could make it happen.
Now, let's get real for a second. HMP Wakefield is a fortress.
We're talking layers of fences, security checks, guards who probably wouldn't blink twice at taking
down someone like Moore if he so much as sneezed too loud. There hasn't been a successful
breakout in decades, and most of the inmates are considered some of the UK's most dangerous.
So, the idea of more busting out sounds like pure fantasy. But that doesn't make his threat
any less terrifying. Because it's not about the likelihood, it's about the mindset. The fact that
he said it, believed it, and probably visualized every step of it is the scary part. And here's
where it gets even darker. Across the Irish Sea in County Waterford, Ireland, police found
the remains of two women who'd been missing for over two decades. No one knew what happened to
them, and they were basically cold cases. But thanks to some coordination between Irish and
British investigators, DNA found on the remains came back with a match, Larry Moore. That's right.
His DNA was all over those poor women. Now, to be clear, that does that
doesn't automatically prove he killed them, not yet, anyway.
Cause of death hasn't even been determined.
But let's be honest, how many times does someone's DNA accidentally end up on two murder
victims buried in the woods for 20 years?
So now he's not just a convicted serial rapist.
He's a person of interest in what could potentially become a double homicide case.
And this is on top of his already disturbing criminal record.
The man's like a one-man crime wave, and it's honestly exhausting trying to keep up with the
sheer scale of his depravity.
The weirdest part.
Some people are still willing to give him the benefit of the doubt, like maybe it's all coincidence,
or the DNA somehow got contaminated.
But let's not kid ourselves.
This is a man who, in a maximum security prison, with nothing to gain and no audience to impress,
openly declared he wanted to mutilate his victims.
It's not someone clinging to innocence.
That's someone who's still deep in whatever dark hole he came from.
Crime journalist Bobby Wall commented on the whole thing and honestly summed it up best,
the entire situation is both bizarre and horrifying.
He pointed out how rare prison escapes are from HMP Wakefield,
so rare that most people alive today probably weren't even born the last time one happened.
So for more to start mouthing off about some cinematic prison break is ridiculous on the surface.
But what made Wall really stop in his tracks was the nature of the threat.
Not just escape, but escape and castration.
It's not just about hurting them again.
It's about power, domination, revenge.
It's sick, and it shows that Moore hasn't changed a bit.
To think there was a time when people debated whether life sentences were too harsh.
Then you meet someone like Moore, and suddenly, locking someone up forever doesn't seem all that extreme.
In fact, it feels like the bare minimum.
People like Larry Moore remind you that evil doesn't always come in the form of a masked figure
in an alley.
Sometimes it wears the face of a guy who could pass as just another stranger in the crowd.
And that's why stories like these matter.
It's not just about the crimes themselves.
It's about the long shadow they cast.
The trauma, the fear, the never-ending questions from the victims and their families.
For Oliver Walton, the guy deserves some serious credit.
Sitting across from someone like Moore in keeping your composure.
That's a different kind of courage.
He didn't flinch.
He documented the moment.
And now the public knows, once again, exactly who Larry Moore is.
And maybe that's the point of all this.
Not just to expose the horrors, but to make sure they're never forgotten.
This forgetting is dangerous.
Forgetting lets monsters hide in plain sight.
Moore's threats might sound like fantasy, but they're also a reminder.
A reminder that some people don't want redemption.
They want vengeance.
And they'll take it any way they can, even if it's just by planting fear.
So yeah, thank God more is behind bars.
And thank God there are people out there keeping an eye on men like him.
the second we stop paying attention, that's when real danger begins. The end.
