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Former truck driver admits guilt in Green River killings

SEATTLE (AP) - Gary Ridgway, the former truck painter suspected of being the Green River Killer, went into court Wednesday and admitted to 48 murders. "I killed so many women I have a hard time keeping them straight," he said in a confession read aloud in court.

<"i wanted="" to="" kill="" as="" many="" women="" as="" i="" thought="" were="" prostitutes="" as="" i="" possibly="" could,"="" ridgway="" said="" in="" the="" statement.="">

Some relatives of victims wept quietly in the courtroom.

Ridgway struck a plea bargain that will spare him from execution and result in a sentence of life in prison without parole. The agreement signed June 13 would put more murders on his record than any other serial killer in U.S. history.

Since signing off on the deal, Ridgway has worked with investigators to recover still-missing remains of some victims in the case.

The Green River Killer's murderous frenzy began in 1982, targeting women in the Seattle area, mainly runaways and prostitutes. The first victims turned up in the Green River, giving the killer his name.

The killing seemed to stop as suddenly as it started, with prosecutors believing the last victim had disappeared in 1984. But one of the killings Ridgway admitted to occurred in 1990 and another in 1998.

Ridgway, 54, of the Seattle suburb of Auburn, was arrested in 2001 as he left his longtime job as a painter at a truck company. Prosecutors said advances in DNA technology had allowed them to match a saliva sample taken from Ridgway in 1987 with DNA samples taken from the bodies of three of the earliest victims.

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