BONUS: Serial Killers & Sidenotes

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Photo by: Max on Unsplash

Tara & Jen’s Bonus Episode Notes:

We have a little something NEW for you this week! In this very first BONUS episode, Jen & Tara discuss the differences between Male and Female serial killers. We did this one a little differently & had a lot of fun with it! It’s not as structured as our typical “stories” or Episodes…but if you’re interested in learning about how differently men and women serial killers have approached killing their victims and more on the how & why…this ones for you! Jen talks about a recent study she found that gives very interesting statistics on both genders and comes up with a theory that we found incredibly interesting! If you geek out on the science behind it all….Jen’s your girl. She loves those numbers and breaking them down. If you enjoy bits of trivia and random interesting facts…that’s where Tara comes in. She enjoys throwing in bits of crazy info here and there that hopefully intrigue even the most well read on these topics and if you’re already an expert…we hope you still enjoy being part of the conversation anyway!

These bonus episodes are very new of course, and though most prefer a good old fashioned murder story, we thought we’d bring you something different from time to time. However, we certainly appreciate your thoughts and feedback too! Please write in or comment below if you enjoyed it, not so much, or have an idea for a future bonus episode. After all, we’re here to make sure we bring you what you want to hear. We may not change our style of presentation…because that’s just who we are, but we love all ideas big and small, crazy or not and we’d love to feature YOUR idea. Bring them on. Shoot us a note on the CONTACT page, we’d love to hear from you.

Hope you are all enjoying the show!

XO - T & J

Episode Sources:

Washington Post Article by Sarah Kaplan

New Atlas Article by Rich Haridy

Crime Investigation

Psychology Today

SueColetta.com

Penn State News Article by Katie Bohn

For Heaven's Sake...

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Tara’s Episode Notes:

Photo by: Alexis Fauvet on Unsplash

As Chicago enters sub-zero temperatures, we wanted to explore some famous Chicago cold cases and crimes this week.

On June 5, 1945 Josephine Ross was found dead in her apartment. She had been repeatedly stabbed. Dark hair was found in her closed fists which indicated she struggled with her murderer.

On December 10, 1945, Frances Brown was found with a knife lodged into her neck and a bullet to the head. A message in lipstick was smeared across a wall of her apartment:

For heavens

Sake catch me

Before I kill more

I cannot control myself”

Then, a few months later 6-year-old Suzanne Degnan was kidnapped from her Edgewater neighborhood bedroom. A ransom note was left behind that read:

“Gel $20,000, reddy & waite for word. Do notify FBI or police. Bills in 5s & 10s”

On the back of the note it read:

“Burn this for her safety”

Degnan’s head and torso were found the day she was reported missing. The killer left a trail of her body parts scattered throughout the city, with her arms being found a month later.

Source: Chicago Tribune

William Heirens, who was 17-years-old at the time, was arrested after trying to burglarize a home in Edgewater. He was brandishing a gun, and during his arrest police dropped a flower pot on his head to subdue him. Heirens lost consciousness and was taken to Cook County Hospital where he would remain hospitalized and strapped to a bed for days.

It’s reported that he was forcibly given injections of sodium pentothal, considered a truth serum at the time. Today sodium pentothal is considered a short term anesthetic, and has been used as a lethal injection drug.

Heirens was interrogated using the Reid Technique, the same technique used on Steven Avery, his case highlighted in “Making a Murderer.” As part of the Reid Technique, interrogation is conducted as accusatory, with the interrogator telling the suspect that they clearly committed the crime they are being held for. The Reid Technique has come under question for eliciting false confessions.

On July 12, 1946 Heirens was charged with the murders of Ross, Brown, and Degnan. When it came time to formally confess Heirens stated that he had no knowledge of the murders, but eventually took a plea deal to avoid the death sentence, hoping that he could one day prove his innocence.

Source: DNAInfo

Much of the original physical evidence has been brought into question by the Edgewater Historical Society. Heirens did take two lie detector tests at the time of his arrest, which were reported as inconclusive, but today evidence points to he was telling the truth – that he did not know about the murders.

Steve A. Drizen, an attorney at Northwestern University’s Center on Wrongful Conviction argued that Heirens’ confession did not match the facts of the crimes or the physical evidence at the crime scenes.

Source: Chicago Tribune

Another suspect, Richard Thomas was initially dismissed by police. He was a nurse who would have the medical knowledge to dismember a body. He also had a history of sexual abuse against his daughter and was arrested for extortion and attempted kidnapping. He also used a ransom note in that case. Thomas was in the Chicago area at the time of the murders and he even confessed to the murders after he relocated to Phoenix, Arizona. Yet, once Heirens was found in the area of the murders Thomas was dismissed as a suspect.

Heirens maintained his innocence. He was the longest-serving prisoner in Chicago, spending 65 years in prison.

He died March 5, 2012 at the age of 83 at UIC Medical Center.

Main Source: Article by Gravedigger on Burial.com

Tara’s Episode Sources:

Article by Adam Higginbotham @ GQ

Wikipedia

Law & Disorder Excerpt by John Douglas…Found on Criminal Element

Fandom.com

DNA Info Article by Linze Rice

Michigan-1 Texas-0

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Jen’s Episode Notes:

Photo by Robbie Palmer on Unsplash

Carl Eugene Watts (November 7, 1953 – September 21, 2007), also known by his nickname Coral, was an American serial killer dubbed "The Sunday Morning Slasher". Watts is now suspected to have killed more than 100 women, which would make him the most prolific serial killer in American history.

He obtained immunity for a dozen murders as a result of a plea bargain with prosecutors in 1982; at one point it appeared that he could be released in 2006. He died of prostate cancer while serving two sentences of life without parole in a Michigan prison for the murders of Helen Dutcher and Gloria Steele.

Early life

Carl Eugene Watts was born in Killeen, Texas to Richard Eugene Watts and Dorothy Mae Young. His father was a private first class in the Army, and his mother was a kindergarten art teacher. When Watts was less than two years of age, his parents separated and he was raised by his mother. Watts and his mother moved to Inkster, Michigan, and in 1962, Dorothy Mae married a mechanic named Norman Caesar with whom she had two daughters.

As a child, Watts was described as being strange. Around the age of twelve, Watts claimed that this was when he started to fantasize about torturing and killing girls and young women. During adolescence, Watts began to stalk girls and is believed to have killed his first victim before the age of 15. 

When Watts was 13, he was infected with meningitis which caused him to be held back in the eighth grade. Upon his return to school, Watts had difficulty keeping up with other students. At school, he would often receive failing grades, and was reading at a third grade level by age 16. He also suffered severe bullying at school.

On June 29, 1969, Watts was arrested for sexually assaulting 26-year-old Joan Gave. When Watts was tried, he was sentenced to the Lafayette Clinic, a mental hospital in Detroit. According to a psychiatric assessment, Watts was revealed to suffer from mild mental retardation, with a full scale I.Q. of 68, and to have a delusional thought process, though a police officer interrogating Watts after his arrest later stated that he appeared to be "very, very intelligent" with an "excellent memory". He was released from the Lafayette Clinic on November 9, 1969.

Despite his poor grades, Watts graduated from high school in 1973, and received a football scholarship to Lane College in Jackson, Tennessee. He was expelled from Lane College after only three months because he was accused of stalking and assaulting women. Another reason he was expelled was because many people at Lane College believed Watts was a suspect in the brutal murder of a female student; however, there was not enough evidence to convict him of the murder. After his expulsion he moved to Houston, Texas.

Murders

Watts' career as a serial killer began when he was 20 years old in 1974, by kidnapping his victims from their homes, torturing them, and then murdering them. On October 30, 1974, Watts tortured and brutally murdered 20-year-old Gloria Steele, who was believed to be his second victim. 

Watts, who was African American, almost always killed young white women. Watts killed females between the ages of 14 and 44 using methods such as strangulation, stabbing, bludgeoning, and drowning. Watts had murdered dozens of women between 1974 and 1982, and despite the many women he murdered, Watts was not discovered as a serial killer for almost eight years.

There were several reasons for this. He attacked in several different jurisdictions and even different states. Even with the advent of DNA testing it was still nearly impossible because he rarely performed sexual acts on his victims, unlike most serial killers of women and girls, and his crimes were not thought to be sexually motivated. Watts was also not suspected to be involved with any of the murders by the people who knew him, and was not a police suspect in any of the murders until his arrest in 1982.

Arrest and discovery

On May 23, 1982, Watts was arrested for breaking into the home of two young women in Houston, and attempting to kill them. While in custody, police began to link Watts with the recent murders of a number of women. Until early 1981, he had lived in Michigan, where authorities suspected him of being responsible for the murders of at least 10 women and girls there. Watts was previously questioned about the murders in 1975, but there had not been enough evidence to convict him. At that time, Watts had spent a year in prison for attacking a woman, who survived.

Prosecutors in Texas did not feel they had enough evidence to convict Watts of murder, so in 1982 they arranged a plea bargain. If Watts gave full details and confessions to his crimes, they would give him immunity from the murder charges and he would, instead, face just a charge of burglary with intent to murder. This charge carried a 60-year sentence. He agreed with the deal and promptly confessed in detail to 12 murders in Texas. However, Michigan authorities refused to go in on the deal so the cases in that state remained open.

Watts later claimed that he had killed 40 women, and has also implied that there were more than 80 victims in total. He would not confess outright to having committed these murders, however, because he did not want to be seen as a "mass murderer". Police still consider Watts a suspect in 90 unsolved murders.

Michigan trial

Watts was sentenced to the agreed 60 years. However, shortly after he began serving time, the Texas Court of Appeals ruled that he had not been informed that the bathtub and water he attempted to drown Lori Lister in was considered a deadly weapon. The ruling reclassified him as a nonviolent felon, making him eligible for early release. 

At the time, Texas law allowed nonviolent felons to have three days deducted from their sentences for every one day served as long as they were well behaved. Watts was a model prisoner, and had enough time deducted from his sentence that he could have been released as early as May 9, 2006. The law allowing early release was abolished after public outcry, but could not be applied retroactively according to the Texas Constitution.

In 2004, Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox went on national TV asking for anyone to come forward with information in order to try and convict Watts of murder to ensure he was not released. Joseph Foy of Westland, Michigan, came forward to say that he had seen a man fitting Watts' description murder Helen Dutcher, a 36-year-old woman who died after being stabbed twelve times in December 1979. Foy identified Watts by his eyes, which he described as being "evil" and devoid of emotion. 

Although Watts had immunity from prosecution for the 12 killings he had admitted to in Texas, he had no immunity agreement in Michigan. Before his 2004 trial, law enforcement officials asked the trial judge to allow the Texas confessions into evidence, which he agreed to.

Watts was promptly charged with the murder of Helen Dutcher. A Michigan jury convicted him on November 17, 2004, after hearing eyewitness testimony from Joseph Foy.

On December 7, he was sentenced to life imprisonment. Two days later, authorities in Michigan started making moves to try him for the murder of Western Michigan University student Gloria Steele, who was stabbed to death in 1974.

Watts' trial for the Steele murder began in Kalamazoo, Michigan on July 25, 2007; closing arguments concluded July 26. The following day the jury returned a guilty verdict. Watts was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole on September 13. He was incarcerated at a maximum security prison in Ionia, Michigan. He died of prostate cancer on September 21 in a Jackson, Michigan hospital.

Article Source: Murderpedia

Jen's Episode Sources

hellhorror.com

Wikipedia

murdervictims.com

thoughtco.com article by: Charles Montaldo

Sorry Charlie

The Wicked Ones Podcast hosts, Tara and Jen discuss the infamous case of Charles Starkweather & Caril Ann Fugate, two teens that went on a killing spree that started in Lincoln, Nebraska in 1957. Charles is yet another serial killer that has been immortalized in pop culture, as the story was the inspiration for the movies Badlands and Natural Born Killers and Bruce Springsteen even wrote a song called "Nebraska" based on Charlie's point of view of the events from a killing spree that shocked the entire nation.

Read More

The Giggling Granny

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Giggling Granny - Episode Notes:

Photo by Christian Newman on Unsplash

Nannie Doss was a serial killer in the first half of the 20th century who earned the monikers "The Giggling Nanny,” "The Giggling Granny," and "The Jolly Black Widow" after a killing spree that began in the 1920s and ended in 1954. Doss' favorite pastimes included reading romance magazines and poisoning relatives.

On the outside Nannie Doss of Tulsa, Oklahoma, was a friendly and happy neighbor, wife, and parent. On the inside lurked a cold-blooded murderess who nearly wiped out her entire family singlehandedly. 

Her first victims were her own children. Her first husband, George Frazer arrived home one day in 1920 and found the kids lying on the kitchen floor dead. Doss claimed it had been an accidental poisoning but evidently Frazer was not convinced. He left and never went back. 

Relatives and husbands continued to die of "stomach problems" and other such ailments until Doss' fifth husband, Samuel Doss sudenly passed away.

The doctor in the case was not as gullible as the previous ones were evidently and didn't simply take Doss at her word. He ordered an autopsy, which revealed massive doses of arsenic in the man's system.

The bodies of Doss' husbands, relatives, and children were exhumed and tested. It was found that Doss' two infant children, four of her husbands, two of her sisters, her mother, and a nephew had all been killed by arsenic poisoning. 

Armed with this information, police soon convinced the poisoner to confess and she was sent to prison for life in 1964. She succumbed to Leukemia the following year.

Article Sources: Thoughtco.com Article By Charles Montaldo & Murderpedia

Jen's Episode Sources

Time Toast

All That's Interesting Article by: William DeLong

Tons of Facts

Murderpedia

therichest.com article by: Lucas Wesley Snipes


Smiley Face Killers

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Smiley Face Killers - Episode Notes:

Photo by Timothy Dykes on Unsplash

The Smiley face murder theory (variations include Smiley face murdersSmiley face killingsSmiley face gang, and others) is a theory advanced by retired New York City detectives Kevin Gannon and Anthony Duarte, and Dr. Lee Gilbertson, a criminal justice professor and gang expert at St. Cloud State University. They allege that a number of young men found dead in bodies of water across several Midwestern American states from the late 1990s to the 2010s did not accidentally drown, as concluded by law enforcement agencies, but were victims of a serial killer or killers.

The term "smiley face" became connected to the alleged murders when it was made public that the police had discovered graffiti depicting a smiley face near locations where they think the killer dumped the bodies in at least a dozen of the cases. Gannon wrote a textbook case study on the subject titled "Case Studies in Drowning Forensics."  The response of law enforcement investigators and other experts has been largely skeptical.

Article Source: Wikipedia

Tara's Episode Sources

Medium: Article by Lisa Marie Fuqua

Rolling Stone Article by: Nile Capello

The Daily Beast Article by: Nicki Egan

CrimeInvestigation.co.UK

Not Another True Crime Podcast: Bonus Episode - 1/17/19

Trick or Treat Tragedy - A Town Mourns

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Episode Photo by Jakob Owens on Unsplash

Trick or Treat Tragedy - Episode Notes:

A killer used his friendship to lure in a little girl to her death. In doing so, he killed not just one girl, but the spirit of Halloween.

Halloween night 1973, 9-year-old Lisa French wanted to wear a butterfly costume, but her mother convinced her to wear something a bit warmer for the Fond du lac, Wisconsin weather. Lisa ended up dressing like a hobo.

After eating dinner, she ran out of the door and started to trick-or-treat. She made plans to meet up with her friend and go to the Pumpkin Place, a safe area some of the parents had put together for the children. But her friend had gotten in trouble and wasn’t allowed to go. Lisa was left to go out alone.

She only made it to three houses that night. The first two, a teacher and a classmate’s homes. They her candy and sent her on her way. The third held more sinister motives.

Gerald Miles Turner Jr, would open that third door for Lisa and invite her inside.

A Killer Lures His Victim

Turner used to share a duplex with Lisa’s family, so she knew him quite well. When he lived next door, she was fond of talking with him. So nothing would have seemed strange for him to invite her inside that night.

After he had Lisa inside, he took her back to his bedroom, where he sexually assaulted her. He claimed that at some point, he realized she wasn’t breathing and tried to resuscitate her. But his girlfriend came home and interrupted him. So he put socks on his hands and moved Lisa’s body into the master bathroom to deal with later.

He went out wrapped in a bathrobe, telling his girlfriend he didn’t feel well. While she was there, he kept returning to the bedroom, was he revisiting Lisa’s body?

His girlfriend ended up leaving again to go to her mother’s. After she left is when Turner put Lisa’s body in a trash bag and her belongings in another. He took both bags a few miles out of town and dumped them in a field.

Something was Wrong

Lisa was to be home by 7 pm, and when she didn’t return, her mother started to worry. By the time 10 pm arrived, the neighborhood had already begun searching for the little girl.

The neighborhood rallied together, posting signs in their windows, telling others that Lisa was missing. Police started a search party that lasted all night. The next day over 5,000 people joined in and widened the search area.

The national guard was called in, and private plane owners volunteered to search from the sky. All-terrain vehicles drove through the marshes, creeks, and fields. All the bodies of water around town had been dragged.

A local photoshop printed 6,000 copies of Lisa’s school photo that was passed around and posted throughout town. Gas stations were giving free gas to anyone using a vehicle to search for Lisa.

The Outcome No One Wanted

Eventually, a farmer on his tractor found two garbage bags on his property. He stopped and inspected them, finding the body of Lisa French.

When the news circulated that Lisa had been found dead, the whole community seemed to mourn her loss. They all came out in support of her family for the funeral.

Myron Medin Jr spoke to the mourners who had gathered. “We are here . . . the entire city in spirit is here . . . to share your sorrow.”

Turner had been questioned starting the day after Lisa had been reported missing. By elimination, they could prove she had gone to two homes before coming to his, then no one else had seen her. At first, he denied any involvement.

The Pressure was too Much

But finally, after nine months of being pulled in for questioning, he cracked and confessed. He would change his story during the trial, saying he only confessed to stop the police from harassing him, that he was completely innocent.

During the trial, the medical examiner testified about the cause of death. Lisa French died from asphyxiation. But she wasn’t smothered or strangled. She had died due to shock while she was sexually assaulted.

The jury found Turner guilty of second-degree murder, enticing a child for immoral purposes and acts of sexual perversion.

Robert Owens, the chief psychologist at Taycheedah Correctional Institute, had met with Turner. “He has a cold disregard for people, mainly females. He does not have conscience control to inhibit his impulses for pleasure and to conform to society’s laws.”

During his sentencing, Circuit Court Judge Milton saw Turner for who he was. “He impressed me as showing no remorse . . . no feeling of repentance.”

Continues to Prove Himself Unfit for Society

After everything he did, and with a total lack of remorse, Turner was paroled in 1992 after serving only 17 years. He went to live at a halfway house.

Outrage erupted that this killer was back on the streets so soon. The citizens of Fond du lac brought a civil lawsuit for releasing Turner. They said the state erred in how they calculated his mandatory release date.

Turner was put back in prison when the state admitted their error. He was then set to be released in 1994. This time the state sought to have him held in a secure mental institute instead of being released.

In 1998 Turner got his day in court again. This time fighting for his right to be freed, claiming he was not a sexual predator and should not be held in a mental institute. A jury agreed and set him free.

While out free, he lived at another halfway house. But when a routine check of his computer in 2003 showed it was filled with pornographic and sexually explicit videos that violated his parole conditions, he was sent back to prison.

Currently, Turner is being considered for parole again. But I think it’s already been proven that he will not follow the rules. If he’s re-released, how long until he finds another young victim?

Article Source : Medium - By Lisa Marie Fuqua

Jen's Episode Sources

Sword And Scale

Here's The Fucking Twist

TCPalm. Article by: Sharon Roznik & Mary Helen Moore

FDL Reporter - Article by: Sharon Roznik

The Scare Chamber


Gary Heidnik's Evil Legacy - Buffalo Bill

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Gary Heidnik’s Evil Legacy - Episode Notes:

Photo by JØNΛS. on Unsplash

Gary Michael Heidnik (November 22, 1943 – July 6, 1999) was an American murderer who kidnapped, tortured, and raped six women, killing two of them, while holding them prisoner in a pit in his basement in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Heidnik was sentenced to death and executed by lethal injection in July 1999.

Early life

Heidnik was born on November 22, 1943, to Michael and Ellen Heidnik and was raised in the Eastlake suburb of Cleveland, Ohio. He had a younger brother, Terry. His parents divorced in 1946. The Heidnik children were then raised by their mother for four years before being placed in the care of their father and his new wife. Heidnik would later claim that he was often emotionally abused by his father. He suffered a lifelong problem of bed wetting, and claimed his father would humiliate his son by forcing him to hang his stained sheets from his bedroom window, in full view of their neighbors. After his son's arrest, Michael Heidnik denied that he abused his son.

At school, Heidnik did not interact with his fellow students, and refused to make eye contact. When a well-meaning new female student asked, "Did you get the homework done, Gary?", he yelled at her and told her she was not "worthy enough" to talk to him. Heidnik was also teased about his oddly shaped head, which he and Terry claimed was the result of a young Heidnik falling out of a tree. Nonetheless, Heidnik performed well academically and tested with an I.Q. of 148.  With the encouragement of his father, 14-year-old Heidnik enrolled at the since-defunct Staunton Military Academyin Staunton, Virginia, for two years, leaving before graduation. After another period in public high school, he dropped out and joined the U.S. Army when he was 17.

Heidnik served in the Army for 13 months. During basic training, Heidnik's drill sergeant graded him as "excellent". Following basic training, he applied for several specialist positions, including the military police, but was rejected. He was sent to San Antonio, Texas, to be trained as a medic and did well through medical training. However, Heidnik did not stay in San Antonio very long and was transferred to the 46th Army Surgical Hospital in Landstuhl, West Germany. Within weeks of his new posting in Germany, he earned his GED. In August 1962, Heidnik began complaining of severe headaches, dizziness, blurred vision, and nausea. A hospital neurologist diagnosed Heidnik with gastroenteritis, and noted that Heidnik also displayed symptoms of mental illness, for which he was prescribed trifluoperazine (Stelazine). In October 1962, Heidnik was transferred to a military hospital in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he was diagnosed with schizoid personality disorder and honorably discharged from military service.

Adulthood

Shortly after his discharge, Heidnik became a licensed practical nurse and enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania, only to drop out after one semester. He worked at a Veterans Administrationhospital in Coatesville, but was fired for poor attendance and rude behavior towards patients. From August 1962 until his arrest in March 1987, Heidnik spent time in and out of psychiatric hospitals, and had attempted suicide at least 13 times. In 1970, his mother Ellen, who had been diagnosed with bone cancer and was suffering the effects of alcoholism, committed suicide by drinking mercuric chloride.  His brother Terry also spent time in mental institutions and attempted suicide multiple times.

In October 1971, Heidnik incorporated a church called the United Church of the Ministers of God, initially with only five followers. In 1975, Heidnik opened an account under the church's name with Merrill Lynch. The initial deposit was $1,500. Heidnik eventually amassed over $500,000 (US$ 1,166,000 in 2010). By 1986, the United Church of the Ministers of God was thriving and wealthy.

Heidnik used a matrimonial service to meet his future wife, with whom he corresponded by mail for two years before proposing to her. Betty Disto arrived from the Philippines in September 1985, and married Heidnik in Maryland on October 3, 1985. The marriage rapidly deteriorated after she found him in bed with three other women. Throughout the course of their brief marriage, Heidnik forced his wife to watch while he had sex with other women.  Disto also accused him of repeatedly raping and assaulting her. With the help of the Filipino community in Philadelphia, she was able to leave Heidnik in January 1986. Unknown to Heidnik until his ex-wife requested child support payments in 1987, he had impregnated Betty during their short marriage. On September 15, 1986, Disto gave birth to a son, who she named Jesse John Disto.

Heidnik also had a child with Gail Lincow, a son named Gary Jr.  The child was placed in foster care soon after his birth. Heidnik had a third child with another woman, Anjeanette Davidson, who was illiterate and mentally disabled.  Their daughter, Maxine Davidson, was born on March 16, 1978, and immediately placed in foster care. Shortly after Maxine's birth, Heidnik was arrested for the kidnapping and rape of Anjeanette's sister Alberta, who had been living in an institution for the mentally disabled in Penn Township.

1986-1987: Serial rape and murder

On November 25, 1986, Heidnik abducted a woman named Josefina Rivera. By January 1987, he had kidnapped another four women, whom he held captive in a pit in the basement of his house at 3520 North Marshall Street in North Philadelphia. The captives, who were all black women, were raped, beaten, and tortured.

One of the women, Sandra Lindsay, died of a combination of starvation, torture, and an untreated fever. Heidnik dismembered her body but had problems dealing with the arms and legs, so he put them in a freezer and marked them "dog food". He cooked her ribs in an oven and boiled her head in a pot on the stove. Police came to the house due to the complaints of a bad odor, but left the premises after Heidnik's explanation: "I’m cooking a roast. I fell asleep and it burnt."

Several sources state that he ground up the flesh of Lindsay, mixed it with dog food, and fed that to his other victims.  His defense attorney, Chuck Peruto, said that upon examination of a Cuisinart and other tools in his kitchen, they found no evidence of this. Peruto said that he made up the story to support the insanity defense. The defense attorney said that he started the rumor of cannibalism in public and that in fact there was no evidence of anyone eating human flesh.

Heidnik used electric shock as a form of torture. At one point, he forced three of his captives, bound in chains, into a pit. Heidnik ordered Rivera and another woman to fill the hole with water and then forced Rivera to help him apply electric current from a stripped extension cord to the women's chains. Deborah Dudley was electrocuted, and Heidnik disposed of her body in the Pine Barrensin New Jersey.

On January 18, 1987, Heidnik abducted Jacqueline Askins. The youngest of the six victims, Askins was only 18 years old at the time of her abduction. During a TV interview for the May 5, 2018, special report "Gary Heidnik's House of Horrors, 30 years later",  Askins stated that Heidnik wrapped duct tape around the mouths of the victims and stabbed them in their ears with a screwdriver.

On March 23, 1987, Heidnik and Rivera abducted Agnes Adams. The next day, Rivera convinced Heidnik to let her go, temporarily, in order to visit her family. He drove her to a gas station and said he would wait for her there. She walked a block away and called 9-1-1. The responding officers, noting chafing from chains on her leg, went to the gas station and arrested Heidnik. His purported best friend, Cyril ("Tony") Brown, was also arrested. Brown was released on $50,000 bail and an agreement that he would testify against Heidnik. In part, Brown admitted to witnessing Lindsay's death in the basement and Heidnik dismembering her.  Shortly after his arrest, in April 1987, Heidnik attempted to hang himself in his jail cell.

Death

Heidnik was executed by lethal injection on July 6, 1999, at State Correctional Institution – Rockview in Centre County, Pennsylvania, and his body was cremated.  As of 2020, he is the last person to be executed by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

Article Source - Wikipedia

Tara's Episode Sources

Wikipedia

Murderpedia

Film Daily

Apnews.com

6abc.com

allthatsinteresting.com

CandyMan, CandyMan, CandyMan...

The Wicked Ones Podcast hosts, Jen and Tara discuss a man that was once known in the 1970's as America's deadliest serial killer due to the sheer number of young boys he kidnapped and murdered during a two and a half year long killing spree...BUT, he didn't do it alone. Can you imagine if a trusted friend knowingly lured you to the home of a man who had the evilest of intentions? Listen in...I guarantee you will never think of the "CandyMan" in the same way...ever again.

Read More

Never Trust The Boy Next Door

Hollywood Ripper… AKA - “The Boy Next Door Killer”

Hollywood Ripper… AKA - “The Boy Next Door Killer”

Never Trust the Boy Next Door - Episode Notes:

Photo by Vitaly Sacred on Unsplash

Michael Thomas Gargiulo (born February 15, 1976) is a convicted American serial killer.  He moved to Southern California in the 1990s and has been nicknamed The Hollywood Ripper.

Description of crimes

Gargiulo is a native of Glenview, Illinois, where he may have stabbed his neighbor, 18-year-old Tricia Pacaccio, to death on her backdoor step. Her body was found by her father the morning after on August 14, 1993. Gargiulo moved to Los Angeles in 1998, allegedly to escape the scrutiny of police in Illinois,  and committed two murders and an attempted murder in Southern California between 2001 and 2008.

On February 21, 2001, he stabbed Ashley Ellerin 47 times to death in her home in Hollywood. Ellerin's injuries included a neck wound that nearly severed her head, and deep punctures to the chest, stomach, and back that in some cases were up to six inches deep. According to detective Tom Small, one stab wound "actually penetrated the skull and took out a chunk of skull like a puzzle piece." On the night she was killed, Ellerin had planned dinner, then drinks with her then boyfriend, actor Ashton Kutcher.

On December 1, 2005, Gargiulo stabbed his neighbor to death at her home in El Monte, California.  She was stabbed 17 times.

Gargiulo attempted to murder his neighbor in her home in Santa Monica on April 28, 2008.  She fought off the attack, and blood matching Gargiulo's DNA was found at the scene.

Arrest and prosecution

Gargiulo was arrested by the Santa Monica Police Department on June 6, 2008. On July 7, 2011, the Cook County State's Attorney charged Gargiulo with the first-degree murder of Tricia Pacaccio.  Although Gargiulo is charged in the two California murders as well as the Pacaccio murder in Illinois, police have not linked him to any other murders.  Gargiulo allegedly told authorities in the Los Angeles County Jail that just because 10 women were killed — and his DNA was present — does not mean he murdered anyone, leading investigators to believe that there are more victims.

Media in Los Angeles dubbed Gargiulo the "Hollywood Ripper" as well as the "Chiller Killer."  Gargiulo was held at Los Angeles County Jail while awaiting a capital murder trial.  A pre-trial hearing was held June 9, 2017, in Los Angeles Superior Court with his trial scheduled to begin in October 2017.  After delays, his trial began on May 2, 2019.  In May 2019, actor Ashton Kutcher testified about the crimes.

On August 15, 2019, Gargiulo was convicted on all counts. The penalty phase of his California trial started on October 7, 2019. He faced either a death sentence or life in prison without the possibility of parole. Once he is sentenced, Gargiulo faces extradition back to Illinois to face the first-degree murder charge relating to Tricia Pacaccio. If convicted in Illinois, he will face a sentence of 25 years to life. On October 18, 2019, a jury recommended the death penalty for Michael Gargiulo after several hours of deliberation.  But as of March 2020, sentencing of Gargiulo in California continued to be delayed by defense motions.

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NBS Los Angeles

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No Fence High Enough

Snow Blowers can cause PTSD…

Snow Blowers can cause PTSD…

No Fence High Enough - Episode Notes:

Photo by Victor Figueroa on Unsplash

West Michigan man sentenced to life for killing neighbor while she was clearing snow

CROCKERY TOWNSHIP, West Michigan man was sentenced to life in prison for killing his neighbor while she cleared snow.

Wendell Popejoy, 64, was sentenced Monday to life in prison without the possibility of parole, after he was found guilty of first-degree murder of Sheila Bonge.

Bonge was killed in December 2017 while she was snowblowing. She was reported missing on Christmas 2017 and her body was found in the woods behind her home.

Popejoy said Bonge was a nuisance to the neighborhood and it was a snap decision to kill her.

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ID Special : Game of Homes - Fear Thy Neighbor 

The Murder of Kitty Genovese

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The Murder of Kitty Genovese Notes:

Episode Photo by Lacie Slezak on Unsplash

In the early hours of March 13, 1964, 28-year-old Kitty Genovese was stabbed outside the apartment building across the street from where she lived, in an apartment above a row of shops on Austin Street, in the Kew Gardens neighborhood of Queens in New York City. Two weeks after the murder, The New York Timespublished an article claiming that 38 witnesses saw or heard the attack, and that none of them called the police or came to her aid.

The incident prompted inquiries into what became known as the bystander effect or "Genovese syndrome", and the murder became a staple of U.S. psychology textbooks for the next four decades. However, researchers have since uncovered major inaccuracies in the New York Times article. Police interviews revealed that witnesses either attempted to call the police or were afraid to intervene.

Reporters at a competing news organization discovered in 1964 that the article was inconsistent with the facts, but they were unwilling at the time to challenge New York Times editor Abe Rosenthal. In 2007, an article in the American Psychologist found "no evidence for the presence of 38 witnesses, or that witnesses observed the murder, or that witnesses remained inactive".  In 2016, The New York Times called its own reporting "flawed", stating that the original story "grossly exaggerated the number of witnesses and what they had perceived".

Winston Moseley, a 29-year-old Manhattan native, was arrested during a house burglary six days after the murder. While in custody, he confessed to killing Genovese. At his trial, Moseley was found guilty of murder and sentenced to death; this sentence was later commuted to life imprisonment. Moseley died in prison on March 28, 2016, at the age of 81, having served 52 years.

Article Source : Wikipedia

Kitty Genovese

Kitty Genovese