Rachel Morin, a 37-year-old mother of five from Maryland, was murdered in August 2023 while on a jog on the Ma & Pa Trail. Her body was discovered off the trail, and her death was ruled a homicide. DNA evidence from the crime scene was linked to an unsolved home invasion and assault in Los Angeles, California. Victor Martinez-Hernandez, an undocumented immigrant from El Salvador, was arrested in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in June 2024. Martinez-Hernandez was convicted of murder, rape, and kidnapping in April 2025, with a prosecution seeking life in prison without parole. Morin's murder case has sparked national conversations about illegal immigration in the United States. Morin's children have filed a lawsuit against her grandmother and aunt, alleging they haven't received donated money intended for them.
Risk can be dangerous, but routine can be deadly.
Comfort has killed more dreams than daring ever did.
¿Who are you?. Autographed Letter, Signed. Handwritten, Commercial #10 (4.125 × 9.5 envelope). Baltimore, MD. May 29, 2025.
In
September 2000, Victor Antonio Martinez‑Hernandez was born in
El Salvador. After allegedly murdering a young woman there in January
2023, he crossed into the United States illegally that winter.
Between March and August 2023, he is accused of a chilling sequence
of violent crimes—including brutally raping and murdering Maryland
mother-of-five Rachel Morin while she jogged on a popular trail.
Apprehended in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in June 2024 after a ten‑month
DNA-driven manhunt, he was convicted in April 2025. This narrative
traces his origins, pattern of behavior, victims’ suffering, legal
proceedings, and the wider social and policy ramifications of his
actions.
Victor Antonio Martinez‑Hernandez entered the world on September 19, 2000, in El Salvador, a country long plagued by violence. Born into poverty and turmoil, details of his early family life remain scarce; no records describe stable education or gainful employment, and rumors suggest early links to gang activity in his birth country.
By January 2023, an arrest warrant in El Salvador accused him of a murder so grave that, fearing capture, he fled north. He illegally entered the United States multiple times that year—crossing near El Paso and New Mexico at least three times before successfully slipping through in February 2023. Unmoored and desperate, he drifted across the country.
In March 2023, he is believed to have invaded a home in Los Angeles, where a nine‑year‑old girl and her mother were assaulted. DNA collected from that scene would later bind him to further atrocities.
Events escalated on August 5, 2023. Rachel Hannah Morin—aged 37, based in Bel Air, Maryland, a mother of five—set out for an evening jog along the Ma & Pa Trail. Her Fitbit tracked her final moments between 6:58 p.m. and 7:10 p.m. Her disappearance prompted a frantic search. At 1:07 p.m. the next day, a volunteer discovered her body in a storm culvert, her car still parked at the trailhead.
The scene was horrifying: Morin had been dragged into a culvert, beaten about the head with rocks with such force that her face was unrecognizable, and raped. DNA analysis revealed his genetic material on multiple parts of her body.
Law enforcement launched an intensive investigation. In August 2023, they matched his DNA from the LA home invasion to the trail crime scene. Investigators released surveillance footage and sketches, urging public assistance. Patrols on the Ma & Pa Trail increased, and a $10,000 bounty was offered.
On May 20, 2024—which would have been Morin’s 38th birthday—genetic genealogy identified Martinez‑Hernandez. Four weeks later, on June 14, 2024, he was arrested in a Tulsa bar, where he sat “casually” until police took him into custody. He waived extradition and was flown to Baltimore, arriving at Harford County Detention Center on June 18, 2024.
He was charged with first‑degree murder, first‑degree rape, third‑degree sexual assault, kidnapping, and related counts for both Morin and the LA victims. His trial began April 1, 2025, amid heavy courthouse security. Jury selection consisted of over 120 potential jurors, leading to 18 selected.
Opening statements on April 4 detailed the case. The prosecution portrayed an ambush from a drainage culvert, brutality marked by a rock from the culvert itself, and overwhelming DNA evidence. The defense suggested alternative theories involving Morin’s boyfriend but lacked compelling counter‑evidence.
On April 14, after under 50 minutes of deliberation, the jury returned guilty verdicts on all counts. Prosecutors requested life without parole plus additional time. Sentencing was scheduled for August 11, 2025.
Morin's five children and extended family are left grappling with grief and irreversible loss. The crime horrified the community. A memorial walk drew local attention. Lawmakers called for trail cameras and enhanced safety measures. Local sheriffs cited this case in the national debate on immigration enforcement.
Incarcerated at Maryland correctional facility, Martinez‑Hernandez faces likely natural life behind bars. No rehabilitation efforts have been reported, and given the severity of his convictions, he poses a clear and continuing danger should he ever be free.
The layers of this tragedy—from transnational flight to violent escalation—underscore failures in border enforcement, mental health monitoring of violent offenders, and community safety on secluded public trails. To prevent similar horrors: implement trail surveillance, cross‑jurisdictional DNA databases, and closer scrutiny of repeat illegal entrants with violent histories. Communication between local sheriff’s offices and national immigration authorities must be seamless.
Autographed items from Victor Antonio Martinez‑Hernandez are extraordinarily rare, given his incarceration and vilified status. For the daring collector of true crime relics, such an item could be both morbidly fascinating and financially valuable—though firmly condemned by most.
VIDEO: What Happened to Rachel Morin? | True Crime Stories | https://youtu.be/TfcFZIFpe90
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