
The Thrill Kill Couple: When Elite Achievers Turn to Murder
Investigation Discovery examines how Benjamin and Erika Sifrit committed murders 'for fun'
Quick Facts
On February 2, Investigation Discovery premiered 'Very Scary Lovers,' a special investigation into one of America's most disturbing criminal partnerships: Benjamin Sifrit and Erika Sifrit, collectively known as the 'Thrill Kill Couple.' Hosted by Donnie Wahlberg and Jenny McCarthy-Wahlberg, the 10 p.m. ET/PT broadcast served as a spinoff special following the season finale of 'Very Scary People,' bringing viewers into the dark psychology of a couple united by deadly violence.
Benjamin Sifrit's background reads like an exemplary résumé. A Navy SEAL who graduated top of his class, he embodied military excellence and discipline. His partner, Erika Sifrit, was equally accomplished—a star college athlete whose physical prowess and competitive spirit seemed to promise a conventional success story. On the surface, both possessed the credentials and achievements that society typically associates with law-abiding, upstanding citizens.
Yet together, they became killers motivated by something far darker than profit or revenge. According to the investigation presented in the special, the Sifrit couple committed multiple murders described as being perpetrated 'for fun'—murders undertaken for no purpose beyond the gratification the act itself provided. This motivation places them among the most disturbing classifications of criminal offenders: those who kill not out of passion, financial gain, or even ideological conviction, but purely for entertainment.
The crimes themselves were methodical and brutal. Victims were barricaded in bathrooms during their final moments—a detail that underscores the premeditated nature of the attacks and the couple's control over their prey. After the murders, the Sifrit couple disposed of their victims' remains in a dumpster, treating human bodies as refuse. Evidence recovered during the investigation included a grill allegedly used in the disposal process, suggesting a calculated effort to destroy evidence and conceal their crimes.


