
In the early hours of September 13, 2016, a kidnapped woman lying next to her captor used his own phone to call 911 and whisper her location to police. Her call exposed Shawn Grate, a rural Ohio man who had systematically abducted, tortured, and murdered at least five women over more than a decade — a reign of terror that might have continued undetected had she not found a moment of opportunity.
Grate operated from a house in the rural Ashland area that would later be described as a "house of horrors." His crimes spanned from 2005 to 2016, targeting vulnerable women, many of whom were never reported missing. He restrained his victims using clothing tied to mattress and sofa bed frames, employed a stun gun as a control method, and moved with calculation through the impoverished communities where he hunted.
The breakthrough came through that single 911 call. The unnamed survivor, bound and held captive, managed to loosen her restraints enough to reach Grate's phone. Lying beside her sleeping captor, she whispered into the device, identifying herself as a hostage and naming Shawn Grate as her kidnapper. Police responded immediately, rescuing her from the house and discovering evidence of his crimes scattered throughout: restraints still attached to beds, a stun gun placed on the refrigerator, and a deliberately rigged basement door designed to trap victims inside.
Once arrested, Grate underwent a grueling 33-hour interrogation conducted over eight days by investigator Kim Mega. During this process, he confessed to killing five women: Stacey Stanley, Elizabeth Griffith, Candice Cunningham, Rebekah Leicy, and an unidentified woman whose skeletal remains were discovered in 2007 along Victory Road in northeast Marion County — sometimes referred to as "Dana" in case records.
Grate claimed his first murder occurred in 2007 when he dumped that Jane Doe's remains. He later repeated his confessions to the press from jail in October 2016, detailing a pattern of predation that had gone largely unnoticed in rural Ohio, where missing persons from marginalized communities often receive minimal attention.
The initial charges focused on the murders of Stacey Stanley and Elizabeth Griffith. When his trial began on April 9, 2018, prosecutors laid out the systematic nature of his crimes. By September 2019, Grate had been sentenced to life in prison, where he remains incarcerated.


