As disturbing as true crime cases can be, many people are fascinated by them.
From learning about serial killers' last meals to trying to figure out some of the most famous unsolved crimes, there's plenty out there for true crime buffs.
But if you're really looking to delve into a particular case, you might want to consider traveling to the scene of the crime.
We rounded up 15 places in the US that every true crime lover will enjoy, from museums to tours to homes in which grizzly murders were committed.
SEE ALSO: 15 tiny destinations that are packed with beauty and things to do
Learn all the gory details of the Manson Murders from an expert on the subject who hosts three-hour tours in Los Angeles.

The story of how California cult leader Charles Manson brutally slaughtered actress Sharon Tate and four others in 1969 has captivated true crime lovers for years. And while "Helter Skelter: The True Story of the Manson Murders, " a book written by the prosecutor in Manson's case, provides a pretty good account of the murders, the 3.5-hour Los Angeles tour by the same name will let you get even more up-close and personal with the story.
Scott Michaels, who helped write a documentary on the murders, leads the tour, which uses audio recordings from the actual killers to detail the hours leading up to the tragic incident.
Have a drink at the bar where one of America's most well-known female serial killers was arrested.

After allegedly being sexually abused as child and then kicked out of her own home, Aileen Wuornos turned to sex work on Florida's highways as a way to make money. She murdered six men before she was caught and arrested in 1991 at the Last Resort Bar in Port Orange, Florida.
Tourists still come to the bar to see the place were Wuornos had her last drink (whe was executed in a Florida prison), as well as the nearby motel in which she killed one of her six victims.
Walk the streets of Milwaukee's Walker's Point neighborhood, where one of the country's most disturbing serial killers lured in several of his victims.

Jeffrey Dahmer not only murdered 17 men and boys between the late '70s and early '90s, but also raped some of them, and engaged in necrophilia and cannibalism.
Dahmer committed a number of these horrifying crimes in Milwaukee, and the Cream City Cannibal Tour allows participants to walk the streets on which Dahmer lured in seven of his victims. Just beware — this 75-minute tour has been banned on Groupon twice, so if you're easily spooked, it might not be the activity for you.
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