When talking about serial killers, you are prepared for the creepy,
the depraved, and the insane. But when you dig through the lives of
these men, you’ll also find incidents where they’re disarmingly human,
disturbingly influential, or even wickedly funny.
10. Ted Bundy Saved A Child From Drowning
Out
of all real-life killers, Ted Bundy seems to most resemble the
fictional stereotype. He was cold, cunning, charming, and intelligent.
He was handsome, charismatic, and good at manipulating people. As a
result of this, Bundy managed to kill 30 women across the US and
remained a suspect in many other cases.
One of the people who
knew Bundy best is crime author Ann Rule. The two worked at the same
suicide hotline. In her book covering Bundy’s murders titled The
Stranger Beside Me, Rule shares one of the most peculiar stories about
Bundy—how, in 1970, he saved a toddler from drowning.
The child
was three years old, and he had wandered away from his parents while on
vacation at Green Lake in Seattle. Bundy was the first to notice him
when he started drowning, and he jumped into the water and rescued the
child—hardly an act one would expect from a killer with no regard for
human life.
9. Rodney Alcala Won The Dating Game
Serial
killers receive a lot of media coverage and TV time once their murders
come to light, but this killer’s 15 minutes of fame occurred beforehand.
For most of the 1970s, Rodney Alcala killed women in New York
and California (most likely in other places, too), posing as a
successful Playboy photographer. Police today have over 1,000
photographs taken by Alcala featuring unidentified people, so Alcala may
be responsible for many more than the seven murders he has been
convicted of.
In the middle of this killing spree, Alcala
appeared on the hit TV show The Dating Game. The rules of the show were
straightforward—the contestant interviewed three eligible bachelors who
were hidden from her view and chose one of them for a date. On September
13, 1978, Rodney Alcala was Bachelor No.1. He won the game by
describing himself as a banana and asking the contestant to peel him.
Fortunately
for contestant Cheryl Bradshaw, she refused to go on a date with him
after the two talked in the green room after the show and she found him
“creepy.” Smart choice.
8. John Wayne Gacy Met The First Lady
Even though we now know John Wayne Gacy for killing 33 people and
burying most of them in the crawl space of his home, there was a time
when he was regarded as a pillar of the community. He owned a successful
construction business, threw parties that made him popular with the
neighbors, and in his spare time, attended fundraisers and children’s
parties dressed as Pogo the Clown.
As a result of all the
positive work he did for the community, Gacy was appointed director of
Chicago’s Polish Constitution Day Parade in 1975. He held that position
until 1978, when he had his weirdest brush with fame. Wife of President
Jimmy Carter and First Lady of the United States Rosalynn Carter
attended the event and took a photo with Gacy.
Gacy is wearing
an “S” pin in the photo—something the Secret Service issues to people
they have cleared and deemed to be no threat.
7. Serial Killer Jealous Of Other Serial Killer
Authorities
in Baton Rouge, Louisiana arrested Derrick Todd Lee in March 2003 and
charged him with seven murders. His crimes received a lot of media
coverage both during his spree and after he was captured, earning him
the uninspired nickname of “The Baton Rouge Serial Killer.” Now that Lee
was locked up, the police paid closer attention to several victims
(most of whom were prostitutes) they’d thought their serial killer had
murdered. But Lee hadn’t killed these people. As it turned out, Baton
Rouge had another serial killer on its hands.
Over
a year later, in April 2004, police arrested Sean Vincent Gillis, who
was convicted of eight murders. However, what was most interesting was
what police found when they searched Gillis’s residence. Besides snuff
films and photographs of the victims, the police found newspaper
clippings and video interviews of Derrick Todd Lee. Gillis had followed
the investigation very closely, growing extremely concerned that Lee was
stealing his spotlight.
Gillis’s
fears were well founded. The media covered both around the same time,
and while Lee’s nickname was rather generic, Gillis’s labeled him as
just an afterthought. They called him “The Other Baton Rouge Serial
Killer.”
6. The Serial Killer Odd Couple
Lee and Gillis
aren’t the only example of multiple serial killers active in a city
simultaneously. During the early 1970s, the city of Santa Cruz,
California had one man abducting, killing, and dismembering young female
hitchhikers and another killing at random using whatever he could get
his hands on.
The two men were caught only months apart. On February 13, 1973, Herbert Mullin was apprehended, and on April 20, Edmund “The Co-ed Killer” Kemper surrendered to the police. This led to the bizarre situation where the two famous killers shared adjoining cells.
Even
though both were serial killers, the two were totally different. Kemper
was a calculated killer with a reported genius IQ of 140, while Mullin
was disorganized and delusional. There was also a huge physical
difference. The 205-centimeter (6’9″), 135-kilogram (300 lb) Kemper
towered over most people, especially the diminutive 170-centimeter
(5’7″) Mullin. This led to several instances where Kemper used his
stature to show Mullin who was boss and even conduct experiments on him.
As Kemper himself put it, “Well, [Mullin] had a habit of
singing and bothering people when somebody tried to watch TV. So I threw
water on him to shut him up. Then, when he was a good boy, I’d give him
some peanuts. Herbie liked peanuts. That was effective, because pretty
soon he asked permission to sing. That’s called behavior modification treatment.”
5. The Murderous Movie Buffs
Los Angeles in the late ’70s was yet another place besieged by dual serial killers, but this pair—cousins Angelo Buono and Kenneth Bianchi—was
a team working together. The duo kidnapped, tortured, and killed 10
girls and women within a four-month period. The press, suspecting a
single culprit, dubbed the unknown killer the “Hillside Strangler.”
In
cases like this, attention usually falls solely on the perpetrators,
while the victims are forgotten. However, with the Hillside Stranglers, a
lot of focus shifted toward a potential victim, Catharine Lorre Baker.
Baker was the daughter of renowned actor Peter Lorre, whose most
notorious role was coincidentally that of a serial killer in Fritz
Lang’s 1931 masterpiece M.
One night in 1977, the murdering duo
approached her with every intention of killing her, but when they
learned who she was, they let her go. It’s possible that the two didn’t
want the extra attention that a prominent murder victim would bring, but
they said they’d spare Baker simply because they were huge fans of her father’s work.
4. The Axeman’s Jazz Letter
The Axeman of New Orleans
killed eight people between 1918 and 1919, and he was suspected of
several other murders. He was never caught, but his notoriety declined
for decades until he appeared as a character on TV’s American Horror Story.
Like
Jack the Ripper, the Axeman wrote several letters taunting police. His
most famous one was dated “Hell, March 13, 1919.” Besides numerous
comments stating his greatness and power, the letter talks of the
Axeman’s love of jazz music. He wrote that he would go on the hunt the
next Tuesday just after midnight, but every home where a jazz band was playing would be spared.
The next Tuesday, New Orleans saw one of its loudest nights in history. Nobody was murdered.
3. Ressler’s Interview With Kemper
Former
FBI agent Robert Ressler pioneered profiling as a tool for catching
killers. He was also one of the first agents of the Behavioral Science
Unit (the real version of the BAU featured in the hit TV show Criminal
Minds). As part of his job, he interviewed numerous serial killers.
However, his interview with serial killer Edmund Kemper almost took a
very dark turn.
This was not the first time he’d talked with
Kemper at Vacaville Prison. In fact, he had built a strong enough
relationship with the killer to feel comfortable being alone with him
during the interview. After several hours of talking, Ressler was ready
to leave, so he pressed a button to call a guard back into the room. Nobody came.
He
pressed the button a few times, getting more and more anxious, but he
kept talking to Kemper to keep him calm. Kemper picked up on his anxiety
and taunted him. “If I went apes—t in here, you’d be in a lot of
trouble, wouldn’t you?” said Kemper. “I could screw your head off and place it on the table to greet the guard.”
Despite
these words, Kemper never tried anything, and when the guards finally
arrived, he said that he’d merely been kidding. Ressler interviewed
Edmund Kemper several times after that, but he never went alone again.
2. Richard Ramirez Got Married On Death Row
Many people find a deep fascination with notorious criminals. Research
says those who take this too far suffer from a psychological problem
called hybristophilia,
which is an attraction to people who commit violent crimes. An
extremely violent criminal who garners tons of media attention and
relishes every moment would be a prime target for hybristophiles.
Enter
Richard Ramirez. Known to many as the Night Stalker, Ramirez terrorized
Los Angeles and San Francisco between 1984 and 1985. He entered random
homes at night and butchered the residents with whatever weapon was
available. By the time he was caught, he had claimed 14 victims.
While
in jail, he corresponded with numerous women, but one in particular
stood out—Doreen Lioy. More than 10 years into his incarceration, the
two were allowed to marry. Since Ramirez was on death row at the time,
the two knew that their time together would come to an end, but Lioy promised to commit suicide when Ramirez was executed.
It
never came to that. They were married for 17 years before she divorced
him, shortly before Ramirez died of lymphoma, still waiting on death
row.
1. Son Of Sam Inspired An Unconstitutional Law
David Berkowitz, better known as the Son of Sam, terrorized New York City in the late ’70s, killing six people and wounding seven others.
Despite a relatively low kill count, Berkowitz became a major sensation
because he attacked people at random, killed in New York, and taunted
the police with letters.
When the Son of Sam was apprehended,
there was a lot of potential money for whoever told the story. But many
people, especially the families of the victims, didn’t want killers to
profit from the publicity garnered by their crimes. Berkowitz’s case led
to a law designed to prevent criminals from selling their stories to publishers.
The
following decade, New York’s Crime Victims Board invoked the law to
shut down a book about ex-mobster Henry Hill, which would later be
adapted into the film Goodfellas. The publisher sued in response, and
the Supreme Court declared the law unconstitutional. As a content-based statute, the law violated the First Amendment.
The
court struck the law down, but amended versions are still in play,
letting victims sue criminals for proceeds from stories of their crimes.
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