At first glance it might appear these are photos of a young girl who simply doesn't want her picture taken but look closer and the signs of something far more sinister are there.
The haunting snaps of 14-year-old Regina Kay Walters show the pure fear in her eyes as cold-blooded serial killer Robert Ben Rhoades got behind the camera to photograph what are thought to be her last living moments.
Rhoades, who was known as the notorious 'Truck Stop Killer,' had forced the teen to don the black dress and heels she was wearing, shaved Walters' head and pubic hair and pierced her with fishhooks before conducting the sick photoshoot, former FBI investigator Mark Young said.
The images taken in an Illinois barn are believed to have been snapped in March 1990 shortly before Rhoades murdered Walters.
Walters went missing while traveling with her 18-year-old boyfriend Ricky Lee Jones after the pair accepted a ride from truck driver Rhoades.
Investigators believe Jones was murdered shortly afterward, while Walters was held captive, tortured and killed inside the rural barn.
The photographs were recovered from his belongings after Rhoades' arrest and later became one of the most powerful pieces of evidence against him.
As well as Walters' murder, Rhoades was convicted of killing hitchhiking newlyweds Patricia Walsh and Douglas Zyskowski, though investigators believe he may have been responsible for as many as 50 deaths.
Robert Ben Rhoades photographed 14-year-old Regina Walters inside an abandoned Illinois barn shortly before her murder in 1990
He had bought the black dress and heels he made her wear in the photos. The pictures were recovered from his belongings after his arrest
Walters (pictured) had run away from her home in Pasadena with her 18-year-old boyfriend Ricky Lee Jones to start a new life in Mexico when the pair accepted a ride from Rhoades
He was arrested on April 1, 1990, after an Arizona state trooper discovered a naked woman chained inside a hidden compartment in his truck.
Regina Kay Walters and Ricky Lee Jones' murders
Walters was just 14 years old when she ran away from her home in Pasadena, Texas, with Jones in February 1990.
Friends later described Jones, who had spent much of his childhood in foster care, as a quiet teenager devoted to Walters. The couple planned to hitchhike to Mexico and start a new life together and accepted a ride from Rhoades.
But things took a tragic turn. Police believe Rhoades killed Jones soon after picking them up but kept Walters captive for at least two weeks before eventually murdering her.
Young also said Rhoades taunted Walters' father during her captivity, allegedly telling him: 'I made some changes. I cut her hair.' In another call, he reportedly suggested she had been left in a barn.
Former FBI investigator Young previously told GQ that the photographs recovered from Rhoades' possession appeared to document changes in Walters' appearance and injuries over time, leading investigators to conclude she had been held captive before her murder.
Investigators believe Walters was strangled with a garrote fashioned from baling wire and said the wire used to kill her had been twisted repeatedly beyond what was necessary to cause death, suggesting the killing itself was part of the torture, Young said.
Her decomposed body was discovered on September 29, 1990, in the loft of a barn near Stockton, Illinois, nearly six months after Rhoades was arrested in Arizona.
Months earlier, the partial skeleton of Jones was found near Harleton, Texas, on May 26, 1990. He had been shot in the head. Rhoades has never been charged or convicted of Jones' murder due to lack of evidence.
Serial killer Robert Ben Rhoades was a long-haul truck driver who was dubbed the 'Truck Stop Killer'
Who is Robert Ben Rhoades?
Born in Council Bluffs, Iowa, in 1945, Rhoades had accumulated a lengthy criminal record long before his name became linked to one of America's most notorious serial killer investigations.
He was arrested as a teenager for offenses including fighting and vehicle tampering before joining the Marines. His military career ended with a dishonorable discharge following a robbery conviction.
By the 1970s, Rhoades was working as a long-haul truck driver, a job that gave him access to highways spanning the country.
Much of his life during the 1980s remains unclear. While driving cross-country, he was reportedly active on Houston's BDSM and swinger scene but maintained what appeared to be a conventional life with his wife, Debra Davis, even as investigators suspect he was already targeting victims.
Former investigators said many of the women Rhoades preyed upon were runaways, hitchhikers and others living on the margins of society. Davis later recalled to GQ writer Vanessa Veselka that he referred to such women as 'invisible people.'
After his arrest, Rhoades reportedly claimed he had been 'doing this' for 15 years. If true, this would place the beginning of his crimes in the mid-1970s.
Investigators also uncovered a disturbing family history. Rhoades' father had been arrested for sexually abusing a 12-year-old girl before taking his own life ahead of trial.
Authorities ultimately concluded that Rhoades was a sexual sadist who kidnapped women, held them captive and subjected them to prolonged torture and sexual abuse before killing them - otherwise known as the 'kidnap, torture, kill' method.
Robert Ben Rhoades maintained a secret life on the BDSM scene before becoming a serial killer
The victims who came before Walters
Investigators later determined Walters was not Rhoades' first known victim.
In 2012, he pleaded guilty to the murders of newlyweds Walsh, 24, and Zyskowski, 28.
The couple had hitchhiked to Georgia from Seattle to attend a religious convention in November 1989.
After beginning their return trip west, investigators believe they accepted a ride from Rhoades near El Paso, Texas, in January 1990.
Prosecutors said Rhoades killed Zyskowski shortly after picking up the couple and held Walsh captive for about a week before torturing and murdering her.
His body was found along Interstate 10 in Texas later in January 1990, but he was not identified until 1992.
Meanwhile, Walsh's remains were discovered in Millard County, Utah by deer hunters in October 1990.
Her DNA remained unidentified for years before advances in forensic technology linked her in 2003.
The guilty plea spared Rhoades from a possible death sentence and added two more murder convictions to his record.
Patricia Walsh was traveling across the country with her husband Douglas Zyskowski when the newlyweds disappeared after accepting a ride from Rhoades in 1990
Deer hunters found Douglas Zyskowski's skeletal remains in Utah in 1990 after he vanished during a cross-country hitchhiking trip
The survivor who almost stopped him
Not every woman who encountered Rhoades was killed.
Young recalled survivor Shana Holts, an 18-year-old who authorities said escaped from Rhoades in January 1990, just days before Walters was abducted.
According to Young, Holts had been picked up at a truck stop and held her captive inside his truck where he allegedly tortured and raped her. She escaped when he stopped at a brewery in Houston and had left her unchained.
Young said Holts led police back to Rhoades' truck, but authorities were ultimately forced to release him after she declined to press charges.
Holts later said she feared she would not be believed despite what had happened to her.
The close call meant Rhoades remained free when Walters and Jones crossed his path days later.
How he was captured
Rhoades' crimes and dark past did not begin to emerge until April 1, 1990 when an Arizona state trooper stopped to investigate his tractor-trailer parked at the side of a road.
Retired FBI agent Robert F Lee found a naked woman chained inside the truck. She was still alive.
When they searched the truck further they uncovered a hidden compartment concealed behind the driver's seat.
Prosecutors would later describe it as a 'mobile torture chamber.'
Hidden from view except through a narrow opening between the truck's seats, the compartment contained restraints mounted to the ceiling, along with chains, cords, whips, leashes, sex toys, pins and fishhooks.
Handcuffs dangled overhead, where victims were bound and tortured with what investigators described as Rhoades' 'murder kit.'
Investigators said the space allowed Rhoades to keep victims captive while continuing to travel the country's highways.
Sick photos
The FBI released this photograph of an unidentified woman found among evidence linked to Robert Ben Rhoades
Decades after Rhoades' arrest, investigators were still trying to identify who the women were in photographs recovered from his apartment.
One mystery was solved in 2019 when Canadian woman Pamela Milliken came forward after claiming to recognize herself in a photograph released by investigators.
'I knew right away that it was me,' Milliken told APTN News at the time.
According to Milliken, she was hitchhiking from Saskatchewan to Winnipeg in the spring of 1985 when she waved down a truck driver she later identified as Rhoades.
She said he introduced himself as 'Robert' and photographed her moments after she climbed into the truck, telling her it was for security purposes in case she stole from him.
During the journey, Milliken said he pointed to a bumper sticker that read: 'Cash, Grass or Ass - Nobody rides for free.'
'I didn't have any money. I didn't smoke pot, so I knew which one it would be,' she said.
Milliken said the pair later had consensual sex before he dropped her off unharmed in Winnipeg.
Young had previously told Veselka that the photograph was found alongside images of Regina Walters despite the encounter occurring years earlier.
Unlike many women who crossed paths with Robert Ben Rhoades, Pamela Milliken survived the encounter and was ultimately released
Pamela Milliken came forward after recognizing herself in an FBI-released photograph recovered from Robert Ben Rhoades' belongings
Investigators said they believe Rhoades may have been responsible for far more murders than the three he has been convicted of
Veselka later recounted her own a frightening run-in with a truck driver she suspected may have been Rhoades.
She wrote that the man allegedly pulled a knife on her before ultimately telling her to run.
She escaped unharmed but has never definitively identified the driver as Rhoades.
How many did he kill?
Investigators have long suspected the true number of Rhoades' victims was much higher than the three murders he has been convicted of.
Former FBI agents and law enforcement officials compared his trucking routes with missing persons reports and unsolved murders across multiple states.
According to former investigators interviewed by GQ and All That's Interesting, Rhoades may have killed as many as 50 women during his years on the road, though that estimate has never been proven.
Rhoades, now 80, remains imprisoned at Menard Correctional Center in Illinois, serving multiple life sentences without the possibility of parole.

By Daily Mail (U.S.) | Created at 2026-06-07 17:50:38 | Updated at 2026-06-08 22:59:54
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