New Orleans abounds with vampire stories. There’s even one about a pair of men known as the Carter Brothers, who some say were arrested in the 1930s for being serial killers, confessed to being vampires, and were executed. Allegedly their ghosts still haunt the French Quarter to this day. This is the story of how DeathPenaltyUSA.org helped unintentionally debunk that particular tall tale.
The Vampire Episode
In the “Bits and Pieces Bonus Episode” of Haunting American True Crimes, I talked about something I dug up during research for “The Vampire Episode.” Something that made me go, “Hmm…”
It happened when I spotted a story on Yesterday’s America called: “The Forgotten History of Two New Orleans Vampires.”
It was about a police officer in 1932 who spotted an obviously distressed little girl rushing down Royal Street. When he offered assistance she allegedly explained she’d just escaped from a home where she’d been tied up and held captive along with others. The men who held them would cut them and drink their blood. She’d escaped when her ropes hadn’t been re-tied tight enough.
The police officer allegedly followed her to the home, which belonged to the Carter brothers, and he allegedly found four other people in a room tied up to chairs and barely alive, just like the little girl had described.
It was a riveting tale that both got my hopes up and perplexed me. How had I never heard of it before? This didn’t seem like the sort of tale that would be forgotten.
I immediately set to work researching it, prepared to include it in “The Vampire Episode.”
The trouble was, it appeared the reason I likely never heard of it before was because it wasn’t true.
The Devil Is in the Details
There were a lot of details in the story, like the intersection where the Carter brothers’ house of horrors allegedly stood, which was Royal St. and St. Ann.
Other details should’ve helped corroborate the story too. For instance, the names of the serial killers: John and Wayne Carter. Allegedly they confessed to being vampires, needing to drink blood, and warned they’d kill again if released.
It also stated they were tried as serial killers, convicted, and executed. This sort of raised a red flag, but I couldn’t put my finger on it at first. I’ll get to why it troubled me in a second.
Anyway, I pressed on with my research. Because even though the article said it was a forgotten story, it was sensational. You’d think something like this would have definitely hit the papers, but I couldn’t find any mention of anything like it at all.
Which was suspicious. For Haunt Jaunts in general, but especially while researching stories for the Haunting American True Crimes series, one thing that quickly became apparent was that papers love sensational, weird, and wild stories —regardless of the decade. It’s as true now as it was back in 1921.
Had the story of the Carter brother vampires somehow been kept from the press? Perhaps. I gave it the benefit of the doubt and thought about how to research it from another angle.
What about executions? Could I verify men named John Carter and Wayne Carter had been executed in Louisiana? That’s what led me to DeathPenaltyUSA.org.
DeathPenaltyUSA.org’s Execution Index
DeathPenaltyUSA.org has an index of all Louisiana executions from 1911 to 1961.
But the only Carters I could find that had been put to death in Louisiana was a man named Sampson Carter in 1933 and a Herman Carter in 1943.
Maybe Yesterday’s America had the date wrong? Maybe this vampire incident didn’t happen in 1932?
So I checked all of the Louisiana indexes that DeathPenaltyUSA.org had. No men named Carter were executed from 1911 to 1932 either. None appeared on the 1722 to 1875 index either. An Aaron Carter shows up in 1878 on the 1876 to 1910 index.
These were alleged vampires we were talking about. Maybe they’d somehow lived on death row for decades? Maybe when capital punishment resumed in 1976 they were still there?
Nope. No Carter has been executed on death row in Louisiana since Herman in 1943. Unless, of course, DeathPenaltyUSA.org missed one.
Hmm… Curiouser and curiouser. Maybe the name was wrong?
Carson Brothers Not Carter?
Vocal Media’s Horror section recounted the tale of the forgotten New Orleans vampires in a “Vampires in America” article. Except, there were some inconsistencies in their story, including alternating between “Carson” and “Carter” for the brothers’ last names.
Let’s say the year was right but the name was wrong. Were there a pair of Carsons executed sometime after 1932?
Nope.
Both the Yesterday’s America and Vocal articles wrote that the Carter Brothers had been buried in one of the New Orleans cemeteries, but neither stated which one. What was special about the brothers’ interment was that supposedly when their vault was opened after a year to make room to bury someone else, as was the custom in Lousiana (it’s now every two years), allegedly the Carter brothers bones were gone.
The Vocal article also included a plot twist worthy of a vampire horror movie. According to them, one of the Carter brothers’ victims survived and went on to murder over 30 people, which, as they put it, “established him as one of the first serial killers.”
Never mind that this prolific serial killer had no name. Or that the phantom Carter brothers are purported to haunt the French Quarter to this day. Neat trick, considering they never existed.
Serial Killer Snafu
But it was the serial killer thing that finally clued me in as to what was wrong with this story.
Serial killers have always been around, but it wasn’t until the 1970s that the term “serial killer” originated. But even more importantly, why would they have been tried as serial killers? Their victims were only half-dead, not fully dead. There was no mention of anyone finding other bodies.
This was a good lesson in paying attention. It had just enough details to seem legit, but in the end, that’s also what tripped the story up.
Check-In
Did you know there was a site like DeathPenaltyUSA.org?
Courtney Mroch is a globe-trotting restless spirit who’s both possessed by wanderlust and the spirit of adventure, and obsessed with true crime, horror, the paranormal, and weird days. Perhaps it has something to do with her genes? She is related to occult royalty, after all. Marie Laveau, the famous Voodoo practitioner of New Orleans, is one of her ancestors. (Yes, really! As explained here.) That could also explain her infatuation with skeletons.
Speaking of mystical, to learn how Courtney channeled her battle with cancer to conjure up this site, check out HJ’s Origin Story.
Wow you did your research. I have heard of the New Orleans vampire house and its victims. I didn’t think there were any REAL vampires, just a disturbed perpetrator or maybe multiple perpetrators. It’s nice to know the story is NOT true! Hmm, no, I didn’t know about DeathPenaltyUSA.
LOL! My husband surprised me and listened to the Bits and Pieces episode where I talked about this. (He rarely listens or reads my stuff. It’s just not his thing.) But for whatever reason, he decided to give that episode a listen on his way to work one morning. He said I was like a bulldog with a bone when it came to this vampire thing. He had no idea there was any place that listed all executions so he was the inspiration for the question.
You may have missed the articles explaining that the phrase ‘serial killer’ was used by detectives in Germany in the 1920’s. There are several instances of the phrase being used even earlier.
But thanks for the research on the Carter brothers. It was interesting.
You’re right. I didn’t see any articles about “serial killer” being used before Ressler was credited with coining it. Which technically he did, at least in the US where it didn’t enter our vernacular until the 1980s. But also technically, sure, the credit can go to Ernst August Ferdinand Gennat, director of the Berlin Criminal Police for “serienmörder” or series-murderer. It’d be interesting to find out if Ressler was at all familiar with Gennat’s work and how he was also trying to hunt such killers down.
Thank you for taking the time to leave some comments!
I really like your site. So glad I found it. I think I’ll attempt to contact Mr. Ressler and see if he is familiar with Det. Gennat’s work.
Oooo! Is he still around? That is a BRILLIANT idea and one that’s made for a “why didn’t I think of that?” head slap moment. lol Also, thanks so much for the compliment! Glad you found me. And even more glad you left such great thought-provoking and insightful, knowledgeable comment. (Or I guess now comments? lol)