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In 1960, Lady Bird Lake was built by the city of Austin. The river-like reservoir was created as a cooling pond for Austin\'s then-new city power plant.
\\nThe 416-acre lake is now primarily used for recreation, but many in the area are now concerned is it the hunting ground for a killer. There have been 10 deaths reported since 2022: four in 2022, five in 2023, and one in the past few days.
\\nEven though police have given no indication there are signs of foul play, social media has lit up with speculation. According to the San Antonio Current, rumors of a serial killer hunting young men and dumping their bodies in Lady Bird Lake ran rampant last April. That\'s when Police recovered the bodies of Jason John, Clifton Axtell, Jonathon Honey, and Christopher Hays-Clark \\u2014 all between the ages of 20 and 40 and all recovered from Lady Bird Lake.
\\nReegan Aparicio says she has no doubts that her longtime boyfriend Chris Hays-Clark was placed in Lady Bird Lake. The dental nurse says despite police assurances that there was no foul play in Hays-Clark\'s death, she believes he was already dead when he went into the water.
\\nThat sentiment, according to DailyMail, is shared by others who have lost loved ones to the lake. Jason John\\u2019s parents also believe there is more to his disappearance and his former roommate believes he was drugged. Martin Gutierrez\\u2019s brother says he believes Martin was murdered in 2018.
\\nDespite family concerns, Austin Police Chief Joseph Chacon says, "Nothing has come to light that would indicate that there is a serial killer in Austin."
\\nAparicio says she believes the Austin Police Department is failing her and the other Lady Bird Lake victims\' families.
\\nJoining Nancy Grace Today:
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