
19 Bodies Found in Austin, TX Lake in 3 Years
By Emmanuel Tredway. Jul 4, 2025
Rainey Street along Lady Bird Lake in 2023. Photo by Jouaienttoi under CC BY-SA 4.0.
The waters of Lady Bird Lake shimmer under Austin’s sun - peaceful on the surface, but hiding a string of tragedies that has left an entire city on edge.
Over the last three years, nearly 20 bodies have been pulled from the lake. Most were men. Many had last been seen enjoying a night out on Rainey Street, the city’s bustling party district. And in whispers online and at barstools, a name has taken hold: the “Rainey Street Ripper.”
Is it the work of a serial killer? Or are people seeing patterns where none exist?
A Trail of Bodies, a Rise in Rumors
Since 2022, 19 bodies have been found in Lady Bird Lake - part of a larger cluster of 38 deaths in and around the area during that period.
Many victims were men between their 20s and 40s, often discovered after nights out near downtown Austin’s nightlife hotspots. Some were last seen on Rainey Street before vanishing, only to resurface days later in the lake.
These patterns sparked concern among residents and true crime enthusiasts alike. When six men with similar physical traits were found dead in 2022, speculation of a serial killer began to build. By 2023, the Rainey Street Ripper name had taken hold.
The Public’s Growing Distrust
Theories of foul play gained traction quickly online. A Facebook group dedicated to the alleged killer now boasts over 90,000 members. TikTok videos and Instagram posts rehash each case, sometimes without context, often with passionate - and fearful - speculation.
A Change.org petition titled “Austin Police Department – Acknowledge That The Austin Drownings May Not Be Accidents” gathered over 6,000 signatures, urging authorities to reopen certain investigations.
Some families of the deceased have publicly voiced doubts about the official cause-of-death rulings. Among the most cited cases is that of Christian Pugh, found beaten and comatose near the lake in 2019 after disappearing from Rainey Street. Police ruled it an accident, but his family remains unconvinced.
The Official Line: No Killer
Despite the speculation, the Austin Police Department has repeatedly stated that there is no evidence suggesting a serial killer is at work. “There is no evidence to support that these deaths are suspicious in any way,” said Sergeant Nathan Sexton, noting most cases involve alcohol, mental health issues, or natural causes, according to Newsweek.
Authorities confirmed that only one of the 38 cases has been classified as homicide. Others were deemed drownings, cardiac incidents, overdoses, or suicides. Still, some victims’ causes of death remain unknown, fueling further speculation.
According to My San Antonio, former police spokesperson Demitri Hobbs chalked the deaths up to “drunk guys walking straight into the water,” though even he admitted some doubts, saying, “Why so many in the same place? Who knows. Who knows. It is a mystery. The detectives are the ones who know the most.”
Why the Rumor Won’t Die
So, if the evidence doesn’t support a serial killer, why does the story persist?
Part of the answer may lie in timing. The spike in deaths coincided with a national drop in trust toward law enforcement, following high-profile incidents of police misconduct. In Austin, confidence in police was already fragile. UT professor and crime historian Kate Winsler Dawson suggests that lack of transparency and past failures have made residents quick to doubt official reports.
“I think there have been enough instances in high profile cases where the police, quite frankly, have screwed up, that it makes people very suspicious already,” she told My San Antonio. “Some people think (police) are lazy, that they don’t care, and I don’t know if that comes from personal experience or if it’s a generational thing. But I certainly think over the years the trust in the police has eroded for many different reasons.”
Social media has also played a role. Unofficial crime sleuths and influencers amplify theories and connect dots, sometimes out of sincere interest, sometimes for clout. And in the void of hard answers, even the most outlandish explanations can gain traction.
So… Is There a Serial Killer?
At this point, there is no confirmed evidence of a serial killer operating in Austin. Authorities have not linked the deaths in any official capacity, and multiple investigations have ruled out foul play.
But that hasn’t stopped the rumors. And maybe that’s the real story. In an age of skepticism, viral content, and tragic coincidences, it might not take a killer to keep the fear alive - just enough questions without answers.
References: Fears of a Serial Killer Prowling Texas After 19 Bodies Pulled From Lake in Three Years | Texas Serial Killer Fears After 19 Bodies Found In Lake | How a String of Deaths Had Austin Believing It Had a Serial Killer
The Topline News team was assisted by generative AI technology in creating this content
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