Texas Killing Fields viewers share anger at police after watching Netflix documentary
Netflix viewers have been sharing their anger after watching the streamer’s number one documentary, Crime Scene: The Texas Killing Fields.
The series looks at how, since the early 1970s, dozens of bodies have been found on a stretch of fields about 25 miles southeast of Houston. Most of these bodies belong to young women and, despite the assistance of the FBI and local authorities, the vast majority of these cases remain unsolved.
Many viewers of the show have taken to Twitter to share their outrage at the police’s failure to bring the killer – or killers – to justice.
“Watched The Texas Killing Fields that s*** was F***ED UP HOW DID THEY LET THAT HAPPEN FOR SO LONG,” posted one person.
A second wrote: “Good lord!! Who saw Texas Killing Fields on Netflix? What the f*** was that? Why was the PD so chill? Oh man, my heart goes out to all the parents. Of late, my emotional side has been shut and buried somewhere but I got way toooo overwhelmed watching this. And angry!!”
“Just started The Texas Killing Fields on Netflix,” added a third. “And once again, cops don’t do their jobs.”
“The new Netflix doc on the Texas Killing Fields is very very good,” tweeted a fourth. “But once again, the true crime genre is solidifying my conviction that cops ain’t s***.”
The Texas Killing Fields docuseris just shows the lack of concern police have for missing people . How a killer just keep getting away with burying bodies in the SAME field before they start to investigate
— Chantel_Dumas (@Byrd_City_Chick) November 29, 2022
Now I'm watching The Texas Killing Fields. One thing that never changes is when it involves women or minorities is the "the police didn't take it seriously at first" line.
— 🌜Leelou *pissed off ginger* WitchyPoo🌛 (@LeelouWitchyPoo) December 7, 2022
In an interview with The Independent, the documentary’s creator Joe Berlinger said: “The level of indifference and ineptitude and the dismissal was actually particularly surprising, given the era.
“You’ve got to remember that, from ‘69 to ‘92-ish ... it was kind of the ‘golden age of serial killers’.”