In A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder Season 2, Pip is investigating the disappearance of Jamie, who is the key witness in the case against Max Hastings, who, in season 1, was accused of drugging and sexually abusing Becca Bell (sister of Andie Bell, the victim Pip was dealing with). investigating) and another teenager. This case leads her to meet a man named Stanley Forbes and to discover what he really is Child Brunswick (child is an alias used to protect his identity, his real name was Jack), the son of a serial killer, who used his own son to gain the trust of other children and thus be able to kidnap and kill them, knowing that They were not going to distrust a child, but they would distrust an adult.

A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder Season 2: The Real Serial Killer Who Inspired the Series’ Case?
Stanley is also a victim of his father, who mistreated him and manipulated him psychologically to make him an accomplice in his crimes, generating a disturbing method that sounds very similar to that of two real serial killers: Wayne Williams, author of the Atlanta Child Murders, and Dean Corll, also known as Candyman. After solving Andie Bell’s case, Pip tries to leave the investigations behind and recover a normal life, but the disappearance of Jamie Reynolds – a key witness in the trial against Max Hastings – forces her to get back to the heart. As the case becomes more complicated, the series not only delves into new layers of manipulation, violence, and secrets, but also into the psychological impact that all of this leaves on Pip. The result is a much more intense season, with an ending full of tension, guilt, and trauma, which makes it clear that history no longer revolves solely around solving mysteries.
Scott Brunswick and His Similarities to Killers Like Wayne Williams and Dean Corll?
Like Scott Brunswick in season 2 of A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder, Wayne Williams and Dean Corll were child killers, and both used other children so they could approach their victims and attack after they let their guard down. Wayne Williams was the author of the series of murders known as the Atlanta Child Murders, which occurred in Atlanta between the 1970s and 1980s. In 1979, they began noticing a rare number of disappearances of African-American children in the Atlanta area, and this led to an investigation that led to Williams’ arrest in 1981, after police spotted his car near the Chattahoochee River, where a body was discovered shortly before (and many others before that). Williams and his car were seen.
The FBI profiler, John Douglas (who was the inspiration for the main character of the suspense series Mindhunter), helped build the profile of the possible killer, and he proposed that, because all the victims were African-American, the killer had to be African-American too, and that this gave him access. In the end, Williams was connected to more than 20 cases of missing children and adolescents, although he was convicted of only two. Williams received a sentence of two life sentences, but because the investigation was full of problems and inconsistencies, there is a theory that, perhaps, he was not truly responsible for all of those deaths.
The murderer who most resembles the one we see in the series is Dean Corll, who was nicknamed Candyman, because his family had a candy store, and he used to give some to the children in his community, so he got along very well with them and had their trust. According to the report of All That’s Interesting, Corll was responsible for at least 28 sexual abuses and murders of children and adolescents between 1970 and 1973. The most shocking thing about Corll’s case is that he did not work alone, but rather with a teenager whom he had manipulated to help him commit his crimes and get victims.
Corll seemed like someone harmless, a nice person, who gave sweets and was very funny, but he had a dark side, and in September 1970, he murdered his first victim, and from there the number became bigger and bigger.

David Owen Brooks was one of the children Corll gave candy to and invited to play at the pool table at his family’s candy factory. Brooks was manipulated by Corll and, over time, was the one who attracted another teenager named Elmer Wayne Henley. But Corll did not kill Henley; he manipulated him and forced him to be part of his crimes, offering him money, as well as Brooks, money to find victims for him.
“Together, Brooks and Henley helped the “Sweet Man” kidnap at least 28 children and young people, ages 13 to 20. The three lured the victims to Corll’s Plymouth GTX sports car or white van, often using candy, alcohol, or drugs to get them into the vehicle”, he says, All That’s Interesting.
Corll then took the children to his lair, where he had them write letters to their families saying they were okay, then abused and murdered them.
The investigation was complicated, and the authorities could not decipher what was happening; it is even believed that many of the families looking for their children did not receive the necessary help.
In August 1973, Corll attacked Henley, tied him up, and began threatening to kill him, but Henley convinced him to let go. When Corll became distracted, he grabbed his gun and shot him 6 times. Corll died there, and Henley called the police to confess everything that had happened, and that was what ultimately helped close the case and find out what had happened to the victims. Henley even took authorities to the location where Corll had buried the bodies.
Although he had been manipulated by Corll, Henley (who is also a character appearing in Mindhunter) was sentenced to 6 life sentences for the role he played in 6 of the murders.
