On July 7, 2001, Gary Leon Ridgway was taken into custody at age fifty-two, ending nearly two decades of one of the most extensive serial murder investigations in American criminal history. Investigators in King County, Washington, had known his name for years — he had been a person of interest since 1982 — but they had lacked the evidence to make an arrest. What changed everything was a scientific breakthrough that had arrived almost twenty years too late for his victims, but not too late for the law.
Advanced DNA analysis, a technology still in its infancy when the Green River murders first began, produced conclusive matches between Ridgway's genetic profile and biological evidence recovered from four of his victims. That confirmation transformed him from a name on a suspect list into a documented perpetrator. Following his arrest on the morning of July 7, he was transported to the King County Jail in downtown Seattle, where he would be held as prosecutors assembled the case that would eventually put him in prison for life.
The investigation Ridgway finally closed that July morning had begun nineteen years earlier. In 1982, the bodies of several murdered women were discovered along the Green River, a tributary of the Duwamish River in Washington State, and the case that would bear that name took shape. The victims were predominantly young women involved in sex work, individuals whose disappearances often went unreported or received minimal investigative attention. This was not coincidence. Ridgway had deliberately targeted people whose absence was less likely to trigger immediate alarm, exploiting a gap in both social attention and investigative resources.
As the body count climbed through the 1980s and into the 1990s, investigators assembled profiles, gathered leads, and interviewed suspects. Ridgway had been among them from early on. He had made statements to detectives that included references to physical altercations with victims — details that cast suspicion but fell short of proof. Without forensic certainty, the case stalled. The killings continued. By 1998, when investigators believe Ridgway stopped killing, he had murdered at least forty-nine women across King County and surrounding areas, making him, at the time of his arrest, the most prolific serial killer in United States history by confirmed murder count.
Gary Ridgway was born on February 18, 1949, and spent his entire adult life in the Pacific Northwest. He served in the United States Navy before returning to civilian work in the Seattle area. He married three times, though all three marriages ended in divorce. To his coworkers and neighbors, he presented nothing remarkable — a working man living an ordinary life. That appearance of normalcy held while investigators across two decades worked to close in on him. His method was consistent: he lured victims through apparent charm and deception, killed through strangulation following sexual assault, and disposed of bodies in remote areas, sometimes returning to those sites afterward.
By the time DNA analysis delivered the certainty detectives had waited twenty years to obtain, the case had consumed enormous resources and outlasted the careers of several investigators who had devoted years to it. With the DNA results in hand, the King County Prosecutor's Office moved quickly. Prosecutors initially indicated they would seek the death penalty, available in Washington State for aggravated murder.
In December 2003, more than two years after his arrest, Ridgway entered a plea agreement. He pleaded guilty to forty-eight counts of murder, formally acknowledging responsibility for the vast majority of the Green River killings. In exchange, prosecutors agreed not to pursue execution. He was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. The legal proceedings had been complicated by the age of the evidence — many of the murders had occurred more than fifteen years prior — and prosecutors determined that a guaranteed conviction and formal confession outweighed the uncertainties of a capital trial.
For the families of his victims — people who had waited through the 1980s, the 1990s, and into a new century without answers — the guilty plea provided what no forensic finding could: Ridgway's own acknowledgment, spoken aloud in open court, of what he had done. The Green River case transformed how law enforcement across the country approaches serial cold cases, accelerating the development of DNA databases and inter-agency information-sharing protocols that have since been used to crack cases once thought permanently unsolvable.
Gary Ridgway remains imprisoned in Washington State today, serving multiple consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole.