Ted Bundy died in the electric chair at Raiford Prison in
Starke, Florida, on January 24, 1989. Biographer Ann Rule described him as
"a sadistic sociopath who took pleasure from another human's pain and the
control he had over his victims, to the point of death, and even after."
He once called himself "... the most cold-hearted son of a bitch you'll
ever meet." Attorney Polly Nelson, a member of his last defense team,
agreed. "Ted," she wrote, "was the very definition of heartless
evil."
http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2013/november/serial-killers-part-3-ted-bundys-campaign-of-terror/serial-killers-part-3-ted-bundys-campaign-of-terror
For his last meal he had steak,
eggs, hash browns and coffee.
http://murderpedia.org/male.B/b1/bundy-ted-photos-9.htm
Richard Ramirez
|
2007 mugshot of Ramirez |
Born | February 29, 1960
El Paso, Texas |
Died | June 7, 2013 (aged 53)
Greenbrae, California |
Cause of death
| B-cell lymphoma |
Other names | The Night Stalker
The Walk-In Killer
The Valley Intruder |
Criminal penalty
| Death penalty |
Spouse(s) | Doreen Lioy (m.1996; div. 2013) |
|
Conviction(s) |
- 13 counts of murder
- 5 counts of attempted murder
- 11 counts of sexual assault
- 14 counts of burglary
|
Killings |
Victims | 14 |
Span of killings
| April 10, 1984–August 24, 1985 |
Country | United States |
State(s) | California |
Date apprehended
| August 31, 1985 |
|
Ricardo Leyva "Richard" Muñoz Ramírez (February 29, 1960 – June 7, 2013) was an American serial killer, rapist, and burglar. His highly publicized home invasion crime spree terrorized the residents of the greater Los Angeles area, and later the residents of the San Francisco area, from June 1984 until August 1985. Prior to his capture, Ramirez was dubbed the "Night Stalker" by the news media. He used a wide variety of weapons, including handguns, knives, a machete, a tire iron, and a hammer. Ramirez, who was an avowed Satanist, never expressed any remorse for his crimes. The judge who upheld his thirteen death sentences remarked that Ramirez's deeds exhibited "cruelty, callousness, and viciousness beyond any human understanding". Ramirez died of complications from B-cell lymphoma while awaiting execution on California's death row.
On April 10, 1984, 9-year old Mei Leung was found murdered in a
hotel basement where Ramirez was living in the Tenderloin district
of San Francisco. The girl had been raped, beaten and stabbed to death, and her
body was found hanging from a pipe. This, his first known killing,
was not initially identified as being connected to the crime spree. In 2009,
Ramirez's DNA was matched to DNA obtained at the crime scene.
"Night Stalker" crimes
On June 28, 1984, 79-year-old Jennie Vincow was found brutally
murdered in her apartment in Glassell Park. She had been stabbed
repeatedly while asleep in her bed, and her throat was slashed so deeply that
she was nearly decapitated.
On March 17, 1985, Ramirez attacked 22-year-old Maria Hernandez
outside her home in Rosemead,
shooting her in the face with a .22 caliber handgun after she pulled into her
garage.Inside the house was her roommate
Dayle Okazaki, age 34. She had heard the gunshot and ducked behind a counter to
hide when she saw Ramirez enter the kitchen. He was waiting when she checked to
see if he was gone, and he shot her once in the forehead, killing her. Hernandez survived her attack
because the bullet fired at her ricocheted off the keys she held in her hands
as she lifted them to protect herself.
Within an hour of the Rosemead home invasion, Ramirez struck
again in Monterey Park.
He attacked 30-year-old Tsai-Lian "Veronica" Yu and pulled her out of
her car onto the road. He shot her twice with a .22 caliber
handgun and fled. A police officer found her
still breathing, but she was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital. The two attacks occurring on
the same day bolstered media attention, and in turn caused panic and fear among
the public. The news media dubbed the attacker, who was described as having
long curly hair, bulging eyes and wide-spaced rotting teeth, "The Walk-in
Killer" and "The Valley Intruder".
On March 27, 1985, Ramirez entered a home that he had
burglarized a year earlier in Whittier at
approximately 2 a.m. and killed the sleeping Vincent Zazzara, age 64, with a
gunshot to his head from a .22 caliber handgun. Zazzara's wife Maxine, age 44,
was awakened by her husband's murder, and Ramirez beat her and bound her hands
while demanding to know where her valuables were. While he ransacked the room,
Zazzara escaped her bonds and retrieved a shotgun from under the bed, which was
not loaded. An infuriated Ramirez shot her
three times with the .22, then fetched a large carving knife from the kitchen. Her body was mutilated with
multiple stab wounds, and her eyes were gouged out and placed in a jewelry box,
which Ramirez left with. The autopsy determined that
the mutilations were post-mortem. Ramirez left footprints from a pair of Avia sneakers in the flower beds, which
the police photographed and cast. This was virtually the only evidence that the
police had at the time. Bullets found at the scene were matched to those found
at previous attacks, and the police realized a serial killer was at large.
Vincent and Maxine's bodies were discovered by their son, Peter.
On May 14, 1985, Ramirez returned to Monterey Park in search of
another random victim and entered the home of Bill Doi, 66, and his disabled
wife Lillian, 56. Surprising Doi in his bedroom,
he shot him in the face with a .22 semi-automatic pistol as Doi went for his
own handgun. After beating the mortally
wounded man into unconsciousness, Ramirez entered Lillian's bedroom, bound her
with thumbcuffs, then raped her after he had
ransacked the home for valuables. Bill Doi died of his injuries
while in the hospital.
On the night of May 29, 1985, Ramirez drove a stolen Mercedes-Benz to Monrovia and
stopped at the house of Mabel "Ma" Bell, 83, and her sister Florence
"Nettie" Lang, 81. Finding a hammer in the
kitchen, he bludgeoned and bound the invalid Lang in her bedroom, then bound
and bludgeoned Bell before using an electrical cord to electrically shock the
woman. After raping Lang, he used
Mabel Bell's lipstick to draw a pentagram on her thigh, as well as one on the
wall of both bedrooms. Discovered two days later,
both women were found alive but comatose; Bell later died of her injuries.
The next day, he drove the same car to Burbank and
sneaked into the home of Carol Kyle, 42. At gunpoint, he bound Kyle and
her 11-year-old son with handcuffs and ransacked the house. He released Kyle to direct him
to where the family's valuables were; he then sodomized her repeatedly. He repeatedly ordered her not
to look at him, telling her at one point that he would "cut her eyes
out". He fled the scene after retrieving the child from the closet and
binding the two together again with the handcuffs.
On the night of July 2, 1985, he drove a stolen Toyota to Arcadia,
randomly selecting the house of Mary Louise Cannon, 75. After quietly entering the
widowed grandmother's home, he found her asleep in her bedroom. He bludgeoned
her into unconsciousness with a lamp and then repeatedly stabbed her using a
10-inch butcher knife from her kitchen. She was found dead at the crime scene.
On July 5, 1985, Ramirez broke into a home in Sierra Madre and
bludgeoned sixteen-year-old Whitney Bennett with a tire iron as she slept in
her bedroom. After searching in vain for a knife in the kitchen, Ramirez
attempted to strangle the girl with a telephone cord. He was startled to see sparks emanate from the cord, and when
his victim began to breathe, he fled the house believing that Jesus Christ had intervened and saved
her. She survived the savage
beating, which required 478 stitches to close the lacerations to her scalp.
On July 7, 1985, Ramirez burglarized the home of Joyce Lucille
Nelson, 61, again in Monterey Park. Finding her asleep on her living room
couch, he beat her to death using his fists and kicking her head. A shoe print
from an Avia sneaker was left imprinted on her face. After cruising two other
neighborhoods, he returned to Monterey Park and chose the home of Sophie
Dickman, 63. Ramirez assaulted and handcuffed
Dickman at gunpoint, attempted to rape her, and stole her jewelry; when she
swore to him that he had taken everything of value, he told her to "swear
on Satan".
On July 20, 1985, Ramirez purchased a machete before driving a
stolen Toyota to Glendale. He chose the home of Maxon
Kneiding, 68, and his wife Lela, 66. He burst into the sleeping
couple's bedroom and hacked them with the machete, then killed them with shots
to the head from a .22 caliber handgun. He further mutilated their
bodies with the machete before robbing the house of valuables.
After quickly fencing the stolen items from the Kneidling
residence, he drove to Sun
Valley. At approximately 4:15 am, he broke into the home of the
Khovananth family. He murdered the household
patriarch, Chainarong Khovananth, by shooting the sleeping man in the head with
a .25 caliber handgun, killing him
instantly. He then repeatedly raped the
man's wife, Somkid Khovananth, beating and sodomizing her. He bound the
couple's terrified eight-year-old son before dragging Somkid around the house
to reveal the location of any valuable items, which he stole. During his
assault he demanded that she "swear to Satan" that she was not hiding
any money from him.
On August 6, 1985, Ramirez drove to Northridge and
broke into the home of Chris Peterson, 38. Ramirez crept into the bedroom
and startled Peterson's wife Virginia, 27; he shot her in the face with a .25
caliber semi-automatic handgun. He shot Chris Peterson in the
temple and attempted to flee, but Peterson fought back and avoided being hit by
two more shots during the struggle before Ramirez escaped. The couple survived their
injuries.
On August 8, 1985, Ramirez drove a stolen car to Diamond Bar and
chose the home of Elyas Abowath, 31, and his wife Sakina, 27. Sometime after 2:30 am he
entered the house and went into the master bedroom. He instantly killed the
sleeping Elyas with a shot to the head from a .25 caliber handgun. He handcuffed and beat Sakina
while forcing her to reveal the locations of the family's jewelry, and then
brutally raped and sodomized her. He repeatedly demanded that she "swore
on Satan" that she wouldn't scream during his assaults. When the couple's
three-year-old son entered the bedroom, Ramirez tied the child up and then
continued to rape Sakina. After Ramirez left the home,
Sakina untied her son and sent him to the neighbors for help.
Ramirez, who had been following the media coverage of his
crimes, left the Los Angeles area and headed to the San Francisco Bay area. On August 18, 1985, Ramirez
entered the home of Peter Pan, aged sixty-six, and killed the sleeping man with
a gunshot to his temple from
a .25 caliber handgun. Pan's wife, Barbara, 62, was
beaten and sexually violated before being shot in the head and left for dead. At the crime scene Ramirez
used lipstick to scrawl a pentagram and the phrase "Jack the Knife"
on the bedroom wall.
When it was discovered that the ballistic and shoe print
evidence from the Night Stalker crime scenes matched the Pan crime scene,
then-mayor of San Francisco Dianne Feinstein divulged the information
in a televised press conference. This leak infuriated the
detectives in the case, as they knew that the killer would be following media
coverage and have an opportunity to destroy crucial forensic evidence. Ramirez, who had indeed been
watching the press, dropped his size 11 1/2 Avia sneakers over the side of the Golden Gate Bridge that
night. He remained in the area for a
few more days before heading back to the L.A. area.
On August 24, 1985, Ramirez traveled 76 miles south of Los
Angeles in a stolen orange Toyota to Mission Viejo,
and broke into the house of Bill Carns, 29, and his fiancée, Carole Smith, 27,
through a back door. Ramirez entered the bedroom of
the sleeping couple and awakened Carns when he cocked his .25 caliber handgun.
He shot Carns three times in the head before turning his attention to Smith.
Ramirez told the terrified woman that he was "The Night Stalker" and
forced her to swear she loved Satan as he beat her with his fists and bound her
with neckties from the closet. After stealing what he could
find, he dragged Smith to another room to rape and sodomize her. He then
demanded cash and more jewelry, making Smith "swear on Satan" there
was no more. Before leaving the home Ramirez told Smith, "Tell them the
Night Stalker was here." As he left in the Toyota,
thirteen-year-old neighbor James Romero III noticed the same "weird-looking
guy in black" that he had seen earlier in the night and thought
suspicious, and he decided to write down as much of the license plate as he
could. Carole Smith untied herself
and went to a neighbor's house to get help for her severely injured fiancé.
Surgeons were able to remove two of the bullets from his head, and he survived
his injuries.
When news of the attack broke, Romero told his parents about the
strange man in the orange Toyota, and they immediately contacted the police and
provided the partial license plate number. Carole Smith was able to give
a detailed description of the assailant to investigators. The stolen car was found on
August 28 in Wilshire,
and police were able to obtain a singlefingerprint from the rear view mirror
despite Ramirez's careful efforts to wipe the car clean of his prints. The print was positively
identified as belonging to Richard Muñoz Ramirez, who was described as a
25-year-old drifter from Texas with a long rap sheet that included many arrests for
traffic and illegal drug violations. Law enforcement officials
decided to release a mug shot of Ramirez from a December 12, 1984 arrest
(photo, below right) for car theft to
the media, and "The Night Stalker" finally had a face. At the police press conference
it was announced: "We know who you are now, and soon everyone else will.
There will be no place you can hide."
1st victim
http://skcentral.com/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=18106#im=0
Maxine Zazar, Victim of Richard
Ramirez. Mr. Zazar
was shot in the head and Mrs. Zazar's body was Mutilated Several stab
wounds and with a T-carving on her left breast, and her eyes gouged out.
http://parakovacs.postr.hu/cimke/Richard+Ramirez
The FBI's Sessions
with Serial Killers
Early efforts to understand serial murder
involved face-to-face interviews.
Published on June 14, 2014 by Katherine Ramsland, Ph.D. in Shadow Boxing
One of the pioneers of FBI behavioral profiling,
Robert Ressler, passed away last year. I was inspired by someone’s
commemorative post to look at an interview I had done with him. Ressler
initiated the FBI’s prison interview program, which assisted with data
collection, and it’s worth seeing the origins of that effort.
While
on the road with John Douglas teaching local jurisdictions about the Behavioral
Science Unit’s approach, Ressler thought it would be a good idea to use their
spare time to visit prisons they were near to gain access to dangerous
criminals. Douglas agreed. They wanted to interview known offenders to learn
more about their criminal experiences. If the BSU could devise a protocol of
questions to ask and get detailed responses, Ressler believed, the unit could
start a database of information about traits and behaviors that these men
shared in common.
“In
1978,” Ressler recalled, “I had come up with the idea of improving our
instructional capabilities by conducting in-depth research into violent
criminal personalities. I suggested we go into the prisons and interview
violent offenders to get a better handle on them and formulate a foundation for
criminal profiling. Initially, it was me and my partner who did this while we
were on road trips for teaching purposes. If I was in California, I would
contact the agent who was our training coordinator and have him set up
interviews with people like Charles Manson or Sirhan Sirhan.”
They spoke with
different types of offenders, from mass murderers to assassins (even failed
ones) to serial killers. They did not want to ask questions that psychiatrists
might have used during prison assessments. They were interested in practical
angles for law enforcement.
To
devise a protocol, data were collected on 118 victims, including some who’d
survived an attempted murder. This helped to develop a questionnaire that
covered the most significant aspects of the offenses. The goal was to gather
information about how the murders were planned and committed, what the killers
did and thought about afterward, what kinds of fantasies they had, and what
they did before the next incident (where relevant).
Among
the interviewees was William Heirens, who in 1945 and 1946 had committed three
murders in an area that Ressler had known growing up, and who was famous for
writing in lipstick a plaintiff request to be caught before he killed
again.
“My
father worked for the Chicago Tribune,” Ressler said, “and he would
bring home the newspaper. I had heard that there was a killer loose in Chicago
who was killing woman and leaving writings on the wall. It was a classic case
and I started following it.”
Heirens
was incarcerated in the Vienna Men’s Correctional Facility in southern
Illinois, and one day Ressler came into the area. “It was weird, because kids
have sports heroes and that sort of thing, and here I wanted to meet this
serial killer. I told him I'd followed his case. He was about nine years older
than me and he was kind of taken aback that he had a fan, in a sense. So I
asked him to participate in our research.”
Other
criminals who were willing to talk included Edward Kemper, the Coed Killer of
San Jose who’d murdered eight girls, his mother, and her friend; Jerry Brudos,
who’d killed and mutilated several women in Oregon; Richard Speck, who’d
slaughtered eight nurses in their shared residence; and John Wayne Gacy, who’d
killed 33 young men, burying most of them in the crawlspace beneath his home.
Other offenders who were not killers were interviewed as well, such as Gary
Trapnell, who had hijacked airplanes and committed armed robbery.
However,
the database was primarily for gathering information about serial murder.
As
they went along, the agents kept refining their methods. Sometimes they had to
be creative to get the information they sought. They soon learned about the
issues with self-report interviews, when some offenders lied, played mind
games, exaggerated their crimes, and bragged about brutal deeds. A few were
mentally ill and somewhat inarticulate.
To
get as much information as possible, the agents did extensive research on a
target subject before talking with him. This was a way to show respect that the
killer might enjoy, as well as to spot when his narrative deviated from the
facts. Despite the brutality of many of the crimes, the agents realized that it
was important to be nonjudgmental. Otherwise, the subject would not
cooperate.
The
initial study, meant to include 100 convicted offenders, compiled data from
only 36, and some were not serial killers. However, it still proved to be
helpful. Afterward, the interviews continued at a slower pace and other agents
got involved.
From
this initial sample of subjects, the researchers gained information that was
useful for developing profiles in the late 1980s. The sample was too small to
make broad generalizations, and it was far from random, but the protocol
offered important groundwork for future members of this unit. Ressler's idea
was a good one.
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/shadow-boxing/201406/the-fbis-sessions-serial-killers
Documentary offers complex examination of
murderabilia artists and collectors.
Published on March 8, 2014 by Katherine Ramsland, Ph.D. in Shadow Boxing
Serial Killer Culture,
Revisited
I just returned from Whitechapel, in London,
where Jack the Ripper launched the "autumn of terror" in 1888. Here
and there, you can find T-shirts, notebooks, bookmarks, etc. with JtR logos,
along with plenty of tours. This is all part of what has been dubbed “serial
killer culture.”
About
a year ago, I interviewed John Borowski about his film on the controversial
subject of murderabilia and murder art, which will soon be released. I got to
watch it last night. As usual, Borowski does quality work.
I
was pleased to see my colleague, Stephen Giannangelo, author of Real
Life Monsters, as the expert who frames the “collector” psychology. The
rest of the cast of characters were musicians, artists, hobbyists,
entrepreneurs, and even Borowski himself. Since I had asked John about this
movie a year ago , let me provide
background:
This is his fourth film.
In the past, he has focused on a single case: Carl Panzram, Albert Fish, and H.
H. Holmes. His interest in serial killers derives from watching horror films
and developing a curiosity about the macabre. As he mentions in Serial
Killer Culture, he hopes to understand the acts of men and woman who
repeatedly kill, as well as to educate future generations.
“They
are human beings just like all the rest of us,” he says, “and I feel it is
society's responsibility to attempt to understand them and not just execute
them so they are out of sight, out of mind. There must be a reason for their
existence and I’m attempting to figure that out.”
For
this film, Borowski “wanted to connect the dots of all the people whom I had
read about or came in contact with while studying serial killers and their
impact on pop culture, including artists who are inspired to create art based
on serial killers. The intention is to shed light on why artists, collectors
and the public are fascinated by serial killers, murder, crime, and death. The
film also highlights the historical importance of archiving true crime
artifacts and literature so that future generations may learn about true crime
history.”
The
dozen or so interviewees include artist Joe Coleman, “murder metal” band
Macabre, collector Matthew Aaron and his Last Dime Museum, Joe Hiles from
Serial Killer Central, Andrea Morden with her Dahmer Tours, and true-crime
musicians The World-famous Crawlspace Brothers.
I
must admit that my favorite segment featured Rick Staton, a
mortician-turned-collector who initiated the serial killer art shows that
featured John Wayne Gacy’s work. He’d been featured in an earlier documentary,Collectors,
and this time around we get his perspective as a burnout.
He still has plenty of stuff, which Borowski shows, but after many years, he’s
had his fill. He’s quite articulate about his experience.
Staton
makes it clear that without Life Magazine and the rest of the
mainstream media producing gruesome images and riveting crime narratives, there
wouldn’t be a serial killer culture. (Personally, I’d take this further back to
19th-century crime museum founders who had hoped to “educate” the
public and had quickly learned how lucrative such displays – and souvenirs –
can be.) You get the point: why are murder musicians and artists so reviled
while mainstream media photos and tales that cover the same subjects so fully
supported?
“There
has never before been a film like Serial Killer Culture,” Borowski
says. “Instead of focusing only on collectors, which plays a small part in my
film, I chose to focus on the reasons artists are inspired to create works
based on serial killers, as well as the public's fascination with serial
killing and true crime. The film is more of a study of the pop culture
influence that serial killers have had on America and the reasons why serial
killers have become celebrities.”
There
is definitely something eerie about looking at items that killers themselves
have touched, i.e., Charles Manson’s black-and-red tarantula creation.
Apparently, he used guitar strings for the legs and wool from his socks, dyed
with Kool-Aid, for the head and bulbous body. He spent a lot of time on it and
you can almost feel those eyes on his creation as he wound the yarn into a
ball.
I
certainly experienced something like this as I stood in Mitre Square, where the
Ripper supposedly gutted Catherine Eddowes. It’s a quiet place on a narrow
street. It's creepy. But I also felt it when I looked at the maps and drawings
from that case, under glass, in the quite respectable London Hospital Museum.
Within a half mile of each other, high-mindededucation and
voyeuristic frisson merged.
I
understand why some people are offended by gory murder art or a Jeffrey Dahmer
Murder Tour (especially victims' families), but there issomething
magnetic about these over-the-top crimes. I write a “crime-trotting” column
for Destinations Travel Magazine that has
become a popular feature. I get educated, I educate, and I also provide what
Ramirez calls “safe danger.”
It's
difficult to separate these aspects into "this is OK" and "this
is not." I think they're intricately linked. I don’t want to own Dorothy
Puente’s fingerprint card or Arthur Shawcross’s toenail, but I’d love to get my
hands on a limited-edition Ripperopoly game or tour Joe Coleman’s Odditorium.
I
don’t know any other documentary producer who can deliver these elements the
way Borowski does. I used to show Collectors in my course on
serial murder. I will now switch to Serial Killer Culture.
To
learn more about this film, or other Waterfront productions, visitwww.serialkillerculture.com.
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/shadow-boxing/201403/serial-killer-culture-revisited
Katherine Ramsland is a professor of forensic
psychology at DeSales University in Pennsylvania, where she also teaches
criminal justice. She holds a master's in forensic psychology from the John Jay
College of Criminal Justice, a master's in clinical psychology from Duquesne
University, a master's in criminal justice from DeSales University, and a Ph.D.
in philosophy from Rutgers. She has been a therapist and a consultant. Dr.
Ramsland has published over 1,000 articles and 46 books, including:
This concludes the third week of death articles. We did not intend for these three to be a series but "Death", "Mass Murders" and "Serial Killers" has given us a broad outlook upon our mortality. If anything we walk away with a greater respect for life and hopefuly more self control of our own selves in dealing with others. This has been Felicity for "The Noodleman Group".
http://www.high-resolution-wallpapers.com/thou-shalt-not-kill-9963
Tell your friends and associates about us!
It's easy! Just copy and paste me into your email!
* “The Noodleman Group” is pleased to announce that we are now carrying a link to the “USA Today” news site.We installed the “widget/gadget” August 20, and it will be carried as a regular feature on our site.Now you can read “Noodleman” and then check in to “USA Today” for all the up to date News, Weather, Sports and more!Just scroll all the way down to the bottom of our site and hit the “USA Today” hyperlinks.Enjoy!