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True Crime

Deadly Serial Killers And Grisly True Murder Stories


From The Last 100 Years
Table of Contents
Introduction

Chapter 1: Code Blue Prevention Strategy


Chapter 2: Poaching People from Above
Chapter 3: The Reckless Killer
Chapter 4: Charles and His Killer Family
Chapter 5: Mother Murder

Conclusion
Introduction

I want to thank you and congratulate you for downloading the book, “ True Crime: Deadly Serial
Killers And Grisly True Murder Stories From The Last 100 Years ” .
A person sometimes does the unthinkable and kills someone when he or she is driven by strong
emotions, such as fear, anger, and temporary madness; but what would drive them to kill many
people, repeatedly?
A nurse who pledged dedication into serving the sick suddenly found it pleasurable to kill their
patients, a promising married man went on top of a tower and shot people as if they were pigs, a
person claiming he was the new Messiah instructed his followers to perform gruesome murders, a
charming man turned into a vicious serial killer, and a desperate mother killed her own children.
What was running in their minds when they committed these murders?
Thanks again for downloading this book, I hope you enjoy it!
Copyright 2015 by Brody Clayton - All rights reserved.

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Chapter 1 - Code Blue Prevention Strategy

Being admitted to a hospital encompasses several feelings, for instance, there would be fear and
worry about the procedures you would have to undergo and medications you’d have to take, then there
would be concerns about the medical bills, and anxiety due to the unfamiliar hospital setting.
However, these negative emotions would be replaced with relief upon meeting and trusting the health
care practitioners that would handle your care, particularly, the doctors and nurses. From then on, you
should feel safe and secured despite all the frets.
But what if one of the nurses taking care of you does not have your best interest at heart, worse, he
wanted you dead?
Charles Edmund Cullen was born on February 22, 1960, in West Orange, New Jersey. He was the
youngest of 8 children in a very devout Catholic family. The head of the household, his father, was
already 58 years old when Charles was born; 5 months short of turning a year old, Charles’ father
died, leaving her mother to care for the rest of them.
When he was asked to describe his childhood, Charles chose just one word: miserable. The misery
was enough that when he was just 9 years old, he took a chemistry set and drank the chemicals in the
hope of attaining death.
That attempt, together with the 19 others he would commit in the future, were all unsuccessful.
On December 6, 1977, when Charles was just 17 years old, his mother encountered a vehicular
accident that led to her demise, this event devastated him so much that he dropped out of high school
and enrolled in the US Navy. Here he was accepted to be in the submarine service, particularly in
USS Woodrow Wilson, a ballistic missile submarine.
Although he reached the rank of petty officer, his time in the submarine made it obvious that he was
suffering mentally: at one point, he went on duty while wearing a green surgical gown, latex gloves,
and mask, which he stole from the medical unit.
The officers then transferred him to USS Canopus, a supply ship, but that didn’t make him better
either because he still trie committing several suicides, the last one got him a medical discharge on
March 30, 1984.
In that year, Charles enrolled in Mountainside Hospital School of Nursing, in Montclair, New Jersey.
The shift in career brought him vast improvements in the beginning: he was elected as the president of
his class, and then in 1987, he got a job in the burn unit of St. Barnabas Medical Center located in
Livingston, New Jersey. In that year, too, he married Adrienne Taub, with whom he had two
daughters.
Unfortunately, it was in his job in St. Barnabas where he would commit his first murders.
On June 11, 1988, when Judge John W. Yengco Sr. was admitted due to an allergic reaction to an
anticoagulant (blood thinning) medication, Charles took his prescribed intravenous drug and
administered it in lethal dosage, ultimately killing the innocent patient. After this, he killed 11 more
people, including an AIDS patient whom he had given an increased dose of insulin.
In January 1992, however, Charles left St. Barnabas because the hospital authorities began their
investigation about the tampered intravenous fluids which they believe took at least a dozen other
lives-- they suspected it was him who did it.
A month after quitting St. Barnabas, Charles got a job in Warren Hospital in Phillipsburg, New Jersey
where he killed three geriatric women by administering lethal doses of digoxin, a very potent heart
medication. His last victim even had the chance to say that a “sneaky male nurse” had injected her
drugs while she slept, but her relatives and the staff at the hospital dismissed her comments as
unfounded.
In 1993, Charles and his wife divorced, with Adrienne filing two domestic violence complaints
against him: the complaints mentioned that aside from hurting her, Charles also showed alcoholism,
penchant for violating animals (he would often place them in bowling bags or trash cans), habits of
pouring lighter fluid in other people’s drinks, and placing prank calls at different funeral homes.
Even with these tendencies, and the fact that he moved out of their home and transferred to a basement
apartment in Phillipsburg, he was still granted with shared custody for their two daughters. At this
point, Charles claimed that he wanted to quit nursing, but since the court ordered him to pay for child
support, he had no choice but to continue working.
Shortly after the divorce, Charles trespassed at the home of one of his co-workers while she and her
son were sleeping, fortunately, he left without waking them up or harming them. From then on, he
started stalking the said co-worker that she was then forced to report him to the police.
After admitting his wrongdoings, which were stalking and breaking and entering, he was placed under
one year probation, but just a day after he was in custody, he attempted suicide, albeit unsuccessfully.
He left work for two months because his depression needed treatment, but it wasn't effective: before
1993 ended, he performed two unsuccessful suicide attempts.
Early in 1994, after leaving Warren Hospital, he got another job in Hunterdon Medical Center in
Raritan Township, New Jersey. He was assigned at the intensive care/cardiac care unit for three
years, but he claimed that for the first two years, he killed no one.
However, this could not be proven because many records were already destroyed during his arrest.
He admitted to killing 5 patients in the year 1996, again, he chose the drug digoxin.
After Hunterdon, his next workplace setting was Morristown Memorial Hospital in Morristown, New
Jersey, but after only a few months, he was fired due to poor performance. From then on, he became
unemployed for 6 months and was unable to pay for child support.
In 1997, he appeared at his previous workplace, Warren Hospital, to seek treatment for his
depression, however, that attempt didn’t cure him either: his neighbors reported that often times, he
would be seen making faces to people when he thought they weren’t looking, he would yell and talk to
himself, and he would chase cats very late in the night.
Despite all this, he was still able to obtain a job in Liberty Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in
Allentown, Pennsylvania where he was accused of administering medications at unscheduled times to
patients who needed a ventilator to breathe.
He was fired when someone witnessed him enter a patient’s room with a syringe in hand-- although
no injections were made, the patient still ended up with a broken arm. One death in Liberty was
accounted to have been caused by Charles, but at that time, another nurse took the blame.
From November 1998, to March 1999, he was employed in Elston Hospital in Elston, Pennsylvania,
where he was suspected to have killed one patient using digoxin: a blood test showed that the patient
had an extremely high digoxin level, however an internal investigation didn’t point him as the exact
killer.
At this point, you must be wondering, how come a very unstable nurse was able to obtain job after
job, without any difficulty?
Apparently, during Charles’ time, there was a national shortage of nurses and the hospitals had no
solid system of reporting which of their employees were stable or not. So even with a multitude of
suspicion from various hospitals, Charles was still able to obtain a job in Lehigh Valley Hospital,
particularly in the burn unit, where he killed one patient, and attempted the murder of another.
In April of 1999, after voluntarily resigning from Lehigh, he immediately got a new job at St. Luke’s
Hospital in Bethlehem Pennsylvania; he was assigned in the cardiac care unit. In his 3-year tenure
there, he killed 5 patients and attempted to kill another.
Early in 2000, he attempted yet another suicide: he placed charcoal grill in the bathtub and lit it while
he was soaking, in an attempt to poison himself with carbon monoxide gas, however, the neighbors
saw the smoke, called the fire department, and he was rescued. After one day of being admitted at the
hospital, he was sent back to his home and he continued his job in St. Luke’s.
While no one suspected Charles of killing any patient in St. Luke’s, he was still fired in 2002 after a
co-worker found several vials of used and unused medicine. According to reports, the theft of the vial
was suspicious because they had no value outside the hospital setting and they couldn’t be used as
recreational drugs.
An internal investigation pointed him as the culprit, so he was given the choice to resign (with neutral
recommendation), or get officially fired, which wasn’t good for his resume, of course, he chose the
first.
Unable to get rid of their suspicion, 7 of Charles’ co-workers in St. Luke’s met with a Lehigh County
attorney to alert them that Charles might be responsible for many of the patient’s deaths: according to
them, although Charles only worked 20% of his duty hours, he was present in the 2/3 of murders.
However, due to the lack of evidence (and the fact that the police didn’t look into Charles’ past), the
case was dropped 9 months after.
After St. Luke’s he was employed in Sacred Heart Hospital, but because he was unable to get along
well with his co-workers, he left. In September 2002, he got a job in Somerset Medical Center in
Somerville New Jersey where he killed 8 patients using digoxin, epinephrine, or insulin.
By this point, he was dating a local woman, but his depression hadn't got better. In June 2003, he
attempted to kill another patient, Phillip Gregor, but fortunately, it was unsuccessful. However, just 6
months after Phillip was discharged, he died out of natural causes.
This last attempt started Charles’ downfall-- apparently, the hospital was already investigating his
wrongdoings, and in the end, they came up with many strange findings: first, he was frequently seen in
rooms of patients he had no business with, second, he was noted to have requested the records of
patients that he were not assigned with, and third, the computerized drug-dispensing cabinets showed
that he requested medications that were not prescribed to any of his patients.
Very timely, in July 2003, the executive director of New Jersey Poison Information and Education
System cautioned the Somerset hospital that if there were at least 4 overdose cases in their patients, it
was highly likely that one of their staff was murdering patients.
Unfortunately, the hospital put off contacting the law authorities until October, when one of Charles’
patients died due to an insulin overdose. After reporting this to the police, the hospital was
reprimanded because they didn’t report the previous case of non-fatal insulin overdose that happened
in August (the patient was also under Charles’ care).
Somerset then fired Charles for lying in his application and he was placed under police surveillance
while the investigation was on-going.
Finally, on December 14, 2004, Charles Edmund Cullen was arrested and he admitted to the killings
he had done. When asked why he committed the murders, he said that he couldn’t bear the thought of
witnessing “Code Blue”-- the event when staff tried to resuscitate a patient suffering from cardiac
arrest; he claimed that he did this so as to free the patients from their agony and to prevent other
hospital staffs from dehumanizing them.
Since he claimed that his memory of the murders was foggy, he only “guessed” that he killed more
than 40 people. In the end he was sentenced to spend 11 lifetimes in jail at New Jersey State Prison.
Even in prison, Charles declared his intention to donate his kidney to the brother of his previous
girlfriend with whom he also had a little girl he’d never seen.
In 2005, aside from the hate-letters, Charles received a strange note: a newspaper clipping asking for
a kidney donor-- it was sent to many of the inmates, but Charles took particular interest in it because
he remembered the name of the supposed recipient: Ernie Peckham, the brother of his ex-girlfriend.
Apparently, Pat Peckham, Ernie’s mother, became desperate to have a miracle donor for his ailing
son that she sent some of the newspaper clippings to the prison. She didn’t expect though, that the
miracle would come from the serial killer who knocked up her daughter.
After taking several tests, it was confirmed that Charles was a match, so in August 2006, he donated
his kidney to Ernie Pekham. Many families of Charles’ victims thought that the idea of him “saving” a
life was a loud slap to their faces, but since Ernie wasn’t the murderer, and there was nothing illegal
about donating an organ, the transplant took place, even with all the controversies.
Chapter 2 - Poaching People from Above

Born on June 24, 1941, Charles Whitman grew up to be a mass murderer: on August 1, 1966, from the
observatory tower in The University of Texas in Austin, Charles killed 14 people (some of the
victims survived for a while but also died as a result of their gunshot wounds) and injured 31 others.
On the same day, the police killed him to end his rampage and a suicide note which led to a twisted
revelation was found in his home.
Raised in South L Street in Lakeworth, Florida, Charles was the eldest of three brothers. With his IQ
of 138, he studied in St. Ann’s High School in Palm Beach where he obtained many achievements,
such as 5 years worth of piano lessons, and being the renowned pitcher of the school’s baseball team.
Growing up, he was the pride of the family: he served as an altar boy (along with his brothers) in
Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Church and even at the young age of 12, he achieved the rank Eagle
Scout: the highest level for a boy scout.
In his years as an altar boy, he became very close with Joseph Leduc, his scout leader and later, a
priest confidante. He divulged to Leduc that one time, after getting home drunk, his father became so
furious that he beat him repeatedly and pushed him into the pool.
The event hastened his decision to join the Marines, a step his father detested vehemently so much
that he tried to cancel his enlistment, but to no avail, Charles was successfully accepted.
In his 18 month duty in the Marines, Charles became a valuable asset as evidenced by the awards he
obtained including Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal and the Marine Corps Expeditionary Medal.
However, the most noticeable achievement he had was the Sharpshooter’s Badge-- he scored 215
points in shooting tests (a perfect score was 250), and he was great at shooting moving targets even
when said targets were at a long distance.
In 1961, he was granted with a scholarship to take Mechanical Engineering in the University of Texas
where surprisingly, he performed poorly.
On August 17, 1962, he married Kathleen Frances Leissner (a schoolmate of his in University of
Texas) and the ceremony was headed by his good friend, Fr. Joseph Leduc. Kathleen was Charles’
first serious girlfriend and they courted for 5 months before they got married.
Perhaps, the married life suited him well, because his grades somewhat improved, but when his
hobbies, particularly hunting, went overboard, his scholarship was withdrawn. The event that led to
his dismissal in the scholarship happened in 1963, when Charles, along with two others, shot a deer,
brought it to his dorm, and skinned it in the shower.
When they were caught, Charles was fined $100 for the activity they called a “prank”.
The Marines brought him back to active duty in Camp Lejeune, where he was immediately promoted
to rank Lance Corporal, however, due to his gambling, possession of a personal firearm, and an
argument with a colleague (said colleague apparently owed him $30 and he demanded a $15 interest),
he was court-martialed and was demoted from Lance Corporal to Private, on top of serving 30 days
in confinement and 90 days doing hard labor.
In 1964, he was discharged from the Marines and decided to go back to the University of Texas, this
time taking up Architectural Engineering. Without his scholarship, he was forced to take on jobs to
pay for his tuition: first, he got a job as a bill collector in Standard Finance Company, and then he
worked as a bank teller in Austin National Bank.
As Kathleen, his wife, worked as a biology teacher in Lanier High School, Charles became a traffic
surveyor of Central Freight Lines and a volunteer Scoutmaster for Austin Scout Troop 5.
What could have driven Charles to shoot people? Some said it was the family issues: in the year of
the shooting, 1966, Margaret, his mother, called him and announced that she was divorcing his father.
Even though he knew that it was a possibility, Charles was still devastated, but he didn’t find the time
to process his emotions since he had to help his mother move from Florida to Austin, where she found
work in a cafeteria. The move prompted his brother, John, to leave as well, but Patrick, his other
brother, stayed with his father because he was working in his plumbing business.
Charles’ father phoned him many times, asking him to encourage his mother to fix the marriage, but
since he knew his father’s violent, authoritative, and perfectionist side, Charles refused.
In the same year, Charles finally got the courage to talk about his depression to Jan Cochrun, the
university doctor, who prescribed him with valium and reminded him to talk to Maurice Dean Heatly,
the university psychiatrist. On March 29, 1966, Charles paid the psychiatrist a visit and he confided
his frustration about his parents’ divorce, the stress of his work, and his struggles as a student.
The interview clearly showed that Charles was “oozing with hostility” so much that he mentioned the
desire to take a rifle and shoot people from above the tower. In the end, he was prescribed to take
Dexedrine, a stimulant used for people with aggressive or hostile behavior, but it wasn’t clear if
Charles followed the orders.
A day before the tower murders took place, Charles seemed to be normal: he picked up his wife and
spent time with his friends, but at 6:45 pm, he began writing his suicide note which expressed his
decision to kill his mother and wife, and his confusion as to what was happening to him.
He said that he was supposed to be “an average, reasonable, intelligent young man” but that he had
become a “victim of many unusual and irrational thoughts”. He even requested the authorities to
perform autopsy after his death to determine if there was something in his head that made him what he
was and that if he had any money left, he would like for it to be donated to mental research so as to
prevent people from becoming like him.
Shortly after midnight, Charles went to his mother’s apartment and killed her; it wasn’t clear how he
did it, but authorities believed that he somehow made her unconscious first before stabbing her
directly to the heart.
He placed the body in the bed and covered it with sheets, he then wrote another note saying how much
he loved this woman and that he was certain she was finally in heaven now.
After writing the very detached note, he went back home and killed his wife, who was asleep; he also
wrote a note saying that he had now “brutally killed both of my loved ones” and he was just trying to
do a “quick, thorough job”. In his note, he again requested for an autopsy, for his money to be donated
to mental research, and for their dog to be given to his in-laws because “Kathy loves Schocie very
much”.
After the murders, he called his wife’s and mother’s workplaces to inform them that they wouldn’t be
able to make it to work because they were ill. He then went to the bank and cashed a $250 check.
With the money to buy guns and bullets, he set out for destruction.
Charles went to a hardware store (Davis’) and requested to buy several boxes of ammunition. The
clerk at the store, surprised at the amount of ammo he was purchasing, asked innocently what he
would use the bullets for. “To shoot some pigs,” was Charles’ reply.
After that, he visited two more stores to buy guns before arriving at the campus at 11:45 am where he
showed a fake ID as a research assistant. He told the security, Jack Rodman, that he was supposed to
deliver equipment to the tower, so he was given a 40-minute parking pass.
With the dolly he also purchased (it was carrying all his weapons), Charles went up to the University
of Texas observatory deck, where he had a complete view of the entire campus.
His first victim was the receptionist, 51 year old Edna Townsley who approached him out of
benevolence to see what he wanted. Violently, he responded by butting her head with the rifle so hard
that a portion of her skull was torn apart, hid her body, put a bullet in her head and left her to die.
Edna suffered for two hours before succumbing to her injuries.
Shortly after Charles reached the deck, several tourists arrived at the stairs leading to the
observatory: MJ Gabour, his wife, Mary, their sons, Mark (15) and Mike (19, and a cadet in Air
Force Academy), MJ’s sister Marguerite Lamport, and her husband, William.
The two teenage boys were slightly ahead of the women, with the men falling behind-- when Mark
reached the top floor and opened the door to the deck, they suddenly heard rapid gunshots and Mike’s
screaming, and the next thing they knew was that Mark, Mike, Marguerite, and Mary were rolling
down the stairs, with Mark already dead.
With all their strength, MJ and William hauled the bodies down all the while noticing that whoever
made the shots slammed the door closed.
That was it-- Charles now had the whole observatory deck to himself. Above him, the clock said it
was ten minutes to twelve noon, above the clock was the bell tower and above it, there was nothing
but the big blue sky.
Down below, Charles had the general’s view of the entire 232 acre campus, the view of Austin, and a
portion of Texas’ countryside. Roads, farms, grasslands, no matter how beautiful the sight was, he
didn’t have the time to appreciate the setting because he had a deadlier agenda in mind.
When Charles opened fire, the bell above him immediately chimed: it was exactly noon and his first
non-fatal victim from below, Alec Hernandez, was already down.
Alec, a 17 year old newsboy was innocently bicycling when a speeding bullet hit him in the groin,
near him, Denver Dolman saw him fall but was very confused as to what happened. In the midst of his
amusement in what he perceived as a cycling accident, he heard gunshots and people started “falling
down”.
One of them was Claire Wilson, 18 years old and 8 months pregnant. She just finished taking her
anthropology class together with fellow freshman and fiancé Thomas Eckman, so the two went
walking outside South Mall when suddenly a bullet hit Claire on her abdomen, straight to the skull of
her unborn child.
Thomas went to her aid and just finished asking her “What’s wrong?” when he too went down with a
second bullet; Thomas was instantly killed. Claire survived but her child and her fiancé didn’t.
The next victim was 33 year old Robert Boyer, a physicist and a mathematician who had just come
out of the Main Building and decided to meet a friend for lunch. As he ventured toward the South
Mall, he collapsed due to a bullet in his lower back, which resulted in his death.
Next, Devereau Huffman, a 31 year old student was shot in the arm, luckily he survived when he took
refuge beside a hedge. Charlotte Dareshori, a secretary in the Dean’s Office, saw what happened and
instantly leaped to aid Dr. Boyer and Devereau Huffman, but she too came under fire. She hid behind
the base of the flagpole for 90 minutes, isolated and scared, but safe.
Near the Rae Ann Dress Shop, a political scientist and student who was working his way up to a
doctorate degree, Harry Walchuck staggered and gasped as he clutched his throat, he fell down and
did not survive.
Just a mere block away from him, Paul Sonntag and Claudia Rut, both 18, were walking when out of
the blue, Claudia gripped his chest and fell down, seconds later, Paul too, collapsed beside her. Both
of them didn’t stay alive for long.
From the West of the tower, Thomas Karr (senior student from Fort Worth) was shot dead in his
spine, while from the East, Thomas Ashton (Peace Corps trainee) was killed from a fatal gunshot to
his upper left chest. From the South of the tower, Billy Speed, 23 years old, was killed when the
bullet from his shoulder travelled to his chest. Another victim fatally wounded was Karen Griffith, 17
year old.
At this point, the police had been trying to infiltrate the tower to stop Charles from his killing
rampage, but it took them some time, enough time for Charles to kill yet another victim in the person
of 29 year old Electrician, Roy Schmidt.
Students and staff from the university were also in chaos, only a few of them risked getting shot just
so they could drag the victims to safety, medical personnel had to come in armored vehicles to be
able to help the wounded, and the police had to zig-zag their way from building to building so that
they could reach the tower.
The three officers who reached the observatory deck first were Ramiro Martinez (with civilian Allen
Crum), Houston McCoy, and Jerry Day. When they arrived on the 26 th floor, they saw MJ Gabour as
he clutched his wife’s shoes; he tried to steal the officer’s rifle because he wanted to shoot Charles
himself.
At this point, Marguerite had also died, leaving only Mike and his mother Mary as the survivors of
the 4 whom Charles first fired at.
Once at the observatory and after Ramiro Martinez missed 6 shots, Houston McCoy shot Charles in
the neck and head-- fatally injuring him. His rampage which resulted in 14 deaths and 31 injured was
finally ended.
As per Charles’ request, an autopsy was done on his body and the doctors found out that he was
suffering from a brain tumor, which could have influenced his actions on the day of the shooting.
Chapter 3 - The Reckless Killer

Born in 1946, Paul John Knowles, like most serial killers, had a very upsetting childhood: his father
wanted nothing to do with him so the minute he showed capability of performing petty crimes, he
threw him out to foster homes and reform schools.
Without supervision from a caring guardian, Paul was first imprisoned when he was 19 years old and
from then on, most of his life was spent with him being incarcerated (some reports said that every
year, he served time in jail for 6 months).
In the year 1974, while he was in Raiford Prison (which is now known as Florida State Prison), he
began a relationship with Angela Covic, a divorcee from San Francisco who often went to his prison
to visit him. When Paul proposed marriage to her, Angela agreed immediately so she produced the
money needed to release Paul.
While Paul’s legal counsel was processing his expected freedom, Angela was fretting her decision.
According to authorities, she consulted a psychic and was warned that a dangerous man was set to
enter her life; so when Paul was finally free and had quickly travelled from Florida to California, all
the while expecting to say “I do”, Angela had already made up her mind and called the wedding off.
Devastated from Angela’s rejection, Paul claimed to have killed three people in the streets of San
Francisco before travelling back to Jacksonville, Florida, where he was imprisoned after stabbing a
bar tender in a club fight.
Adamant that he would no longer stay in prison, he picked the jail lock and escaped on July 26, 1974,
hours after that, the Casanova Killer was born.
On that same day, Paul broke and entered the home of 65-Year Old Alice Curtis, he tied her up and
gagged her before he ransacked the house for money and items he could use or sell. Alice soon died
due to choking, although it wasn’t clear whether her death happened with Paul around or if it occurred
after he left using her car.
Not knowing that the police had already made connections with Alice’s death and him, Paul lingered
around the town for a few more days until he saw that his picture was already being advertised.
Prepared to abandon the hot car in a quiet residential area, his plan was sabotaged when he saw
sisters Lillian and Mylette Anderson, aged 11 and 7 respectively. Paul remembered them to be
acquaintances of his mother, so in the fear that they had seen him, Paul kidnapped and murdered them
before he hid their bodies in a swamp.
Their bodies would not be recovered until 5 months later, when Paul admitted to the crime.
On the same day the Anderson sisters were killed, Paul murdered his next victim: a teenage “Jane
Doe” who was innocently hitch-hiking. For an unknown reason, he raped and strangled her to death.
Decades passed and this “Jane Doe” remained to be unidentified until 2011 when the Georgia Bureau
of Investigation announced in their statement that the teenage girl was 13 year old Ima Jean Sanders, a
runaway from Beaumont, Texas.
The next day, he crossed paths with 49 year old Marjorie Howe; it wasn’t stated whether he forced
her to let him in or if she voluntarily invited him to her apartment, but the certain thing was he used
her nylon stockings to strangle her to death. Allegedly, he also took her television set and gifted it to
one of his former girlfriends.
On August 23, 1974, Paul reached Musella, Georgia and forced his way into the home of Kathie Sue
Pierce. He took a cut telephone cord and strangled Kathie in her own bathroom.
Shockingly, Kathie’s three year old son was also in the apartment when Paul committed the murder,
but he left the child unharmed. On September 3, Paul, who was still using Alice’s car, arrived in
Scott’s Inn, a pub in Lima, Ohio, where he met William Bates, 32, an account executive in Ohio
Power Company.
When William didn’t return home, his wife reported him missing. The bartender who was familiar
with William since he was a regular, told the police that he saw him with a “young red head” and they
had drinks before leaving the club together.
Upon their investigation, they noted that William’s car was nowhere in sight, but a Dodge Dart was
abandoned near the pub; after a while they learned that it was Alice Curtis’ car. A month would pass
before William’s body would be discovered, naked and strangled in the woods.
Now equipped with William’s car, Paul reached Ely, Nevada on September 18 where he bound and
strangled Emmett and Lois Johnson, two elderly campers. Since the crime appeared to be random, the
police had difficulty in making the connection until Paul confessed, and until they traced the elders’
credit cards which he used for a while for his personal expenses.
Three days later, he met a stranded Charlynn Hicks on the road in Seguin, Texas: he stopped by her
car to offer help, but all he did was abduct, rape, and strangle her to death before dumping her body
over a fenced property.
On September 23, Paul met a beautician named Ann Dawson who also became his next victim. It was
never verified, but some reports suggested that Ann traveled together with Paul willingly, even to the
point of paying all their expenses until September 29, when Paul grew tired and murdered her.
He later claimed that he threw her body in the Mississippi River, but the body was never found.
In the middle of October 1974, Paul arrived in Marlborough, Connecticut where he forcefully entered
the home of Karen Wine and her 16 year old daughter, Dawn. Paul bound and raped the two before he
killed them through strangulation using nylon stockings. Unlike the other houses, Paul didn’t steal
anything from them aside from a tape recorder.
On October 19, in Woodford, Virginia, Paul trespassed the home of 53 year old Doris Hovey, whom
he shot to the head using her husband’s rifle. After he cleaned the gun to remove his prints, he laid the
rifle beside the body and left. Since no sexual assault happened and no robbery could be traced, the
police again found it difficult to make connections to Paul.
With William’s car, Paul tried to murder two more hitch-hikers in Key West, Florida, but was abated
when a policeman stopped the car for a traffic violation. Unaware that he had a serial killer on his
hand and that the car he stopped was stolen, the policeman let Paul go with his two intended victims.
This encounter apparently rattled Paul so much that he spared the two and dropped them off to Miami
before he called his lawyer and confessed his crimes. On their meeting, the lawyer advised him to
surrender, but Paul refused; he only left the tape recorder which contained his confessions.
On November 6, in Macon, Georgia, Paul befriended Carswell Carr, who trusted Paul enough to
invite him over to his home where his 15 year old daughter also lived.
Unfortunately, Paul betrayed Carswell’s trust and stabbed him until he died; he also killed his
daughter before attempting to perform necrophilia. When his plan to have sex with the corpse was
unsuccessful, he fled Macon, but not before killing two more hitch-hikers, Edward Hilliard and
Debby Griffin. Edward’s body was recovered but Debby’s was never found.
Two days later, while he was bar-hopping in Atlanta, Georgia, he met a British journalist named
Sandy Fawkes. Sandy admired Paul’s “gaunt good looks” so they spent the night together, but even
though they tried several times to have sex, Paul was unable to perform, suggesting that maybe he
didn’t like it when his victim was willing.
Fortunately for Sandy, Paul left her unscathed on November 10. Susan MacKenzie, Sandy’s friend,
however, had less luck, but was still fortunate. Paul contacted her and demanded sex at gun point, she
escaped and reported it to the police but when Paul was cornered he brandished a gun and escaped.
After several days, Paul arrived in West Palm Beach in Florida, where he broke in and entered the
home of Beverly Mabee, an invalid. Although he didn’t hurt Beverly, he kidnapped her sister and
used her as a hostage; they fled using Beverly’s car.
Luckily, he lost interest in her and dropped her off in Fort Pierce without harming her.
On November 17, near Perry Florida, Highway Patrol Officer Charles Eugene Campbell recognized
the car Paul was driving (he knew it was stolen) so he asked Paul to pull over, but the serial killer
wrestled him and stole his gun.
At gun point, Officer Charles was ushered inside his patrol car and was used as Paul’s new hostage.
With the patrol car’s sirens, he stopped a motorist named James Meyer so that he could abandon the
officer’s car for a more “innocent looking” vehicle, he didn’t let James go though; he took him too as
a second hostage.
However, Paul knew that the odds would be against him if he kept two prisoners, thus, he drove to a
remote woods area in Pulaski County, Georgia and bound Charles and James to a tree before shooting
them to the head.
After leaving the scene, he drove until he reached Henry County where police roadblocks were
installed. Paul knew that if he stopped, he would be arrested, hence he sped through the roadblock
barricades. But, not all went well because he lost control of the vehicle and hit a tree.
Unable to use the damaged car, Paul escaped with police dogs and officers in hot pursuit. The
footrace was chaotic, to say the least, because as he ran, Paul was also firing shots. It wasn’t until an
armed civilian caught him, that the police finally took him into custody. At last, the months of Paul’s
killing spree was put to an end.
On December 18, 1974, while on the way to Henry County together with two police officer escorts,
Paul tried to steal one of the policemen’s guns. His violence prompted the other officer to shoot him
thrice in the chest, which instantly killed him.
Unlike other killers, Paul had no clear method: he chose his victims randomly and he killed them
using different weapons. From one place to another, he picked his next target like he didn’t care about
their background, gender, and age.
The next question would be, why did he do it? Some believed it was because of Angela’s rejection,
while others thought it was all about fame-- after all, he spared Sandy Fawkes, a journalist. Perhaps
he thought that Sandy would write something about him.
On 1977, she did, but by that time Paul was already long dead. In her book “Killing Time”, Sandy
described her time with Paul, how he was charming not only with his good looks, but also with his
approach, hence the nickname, Casanova Killer.
Chapter 4 - Charles and His Killer Family

Charles was born in the year 1934 to a 16 year old Kathleen Maddox, a prostitute and an alcoholic.
After his birth, Kathleen married William Manson, but the marriage dissolved quickly.
Kathleen, who was obviously unprepared for motherhood, wanted nothing to do with Charles, so
even though the boy kept on coming back to her from boy’s school to which he was sent, his mother
rejected him time and time again.
As a first grader, Charles or “Charlie” exhibited Machiavellian traits: he would often recruit gullible
classmates, mostly girls, to attack students which he didn’t like. His teachers would reprimand him
about it, but in his early years he already knew how to use logic: he claimed that his “followers”
were just doing what they wanted to do, and he shouldn’t be blamed for it.
According to his cousins, he would often lie and would demand to be the center of attention when
adults were around. Early on, he showed a penchant for violence, especially when he didn’t get his
way, or when he felt insulted. What’s more, he also exhibited fondness in guns.
By 1951, he was already accustomed to prisons and would often “behave” because he knew the
benefits of being a “model prisoner”. Year after year, Charles went in and out of jail, until his life
took a drastic twist when he married a 17-year old girl in 1955.
At first, he appeared to be a changed man, but soon after their first born arrived, he reverted back to
doing his petty crimes. Sick of the things she was forced to endure because of Charles, his wife,
together with their child, left him for another lover. Soon, Charles would find another woman whom
he’d have a child with, too, but again, it made no difference to his lifestyle.
So when the news came out that little Charlie grew up to be a notorious killer, people who knew him
claimed to feel sadness, but not shock. In probation reports, Charles was described as someone who
had a “marked degree of rejection, instability and psychic trauma” as well as a person who was
“constantly striving for status and some kind of love”.
Some officers pointed him as “unpredictable” and “safe only under supervision”.
For 10 years, he was imprisoned in McNeil Island in Washington State, where he raped other men
while threatening them with razor blades. Surprisingly, it was also there where he learned his liking
for music, particularly in playing guitar.
When he was released on March 21, 1967, Charles’ mental instability grew at a dangerous rate.
During the 1960s, various cults and religious sects emerged, each one claimed some sort of prophecy
and salvation, unfortunately, Charles seemed to have absorbed most of the delusions, which made him
claim that he was a harbinger-- a forerunner of doom.

Despite all these, he was still able to date Mary Brunner, a 23 year old graduate from University of
Wisconsin in Madison who worked as a library assistant. According to reports, Charles lived with
her in her house, but after sometime, he realized that he couldn’t just stay with one woman.
For an unknown reason, he was able to convince Mary to let his other women live in her place as
well; soon enough, the house became home not just to Charles and Mary, but also to 18 other ladies.
These women were among Charles’ first followers.
He gathered others who shared his views on unconventional lifestyle, particularly the use of LSD and
magic mushrooms, and named themselves as “The Family”. The Family soon grew to 100 members
and most of them gave their devotion to Charles and his prophecies-- they truly believed his claim
that he was the new Jesus.
Aside from drugs, Charles’ delusions were also influenced by art and music, he also loved the idea of
“end of the world” as described in the Book of Revelations. It is still a wonder, up to this day, how
Charles managed to convince people that he was a guru, but he did.
According to reports, he borrowed the ideology off another church (Process Church) which believed
that Jesus and Satan would soon reconcile, and together, they would judge the living and the dead.
In 1968, Charles met Dennis Wilson of the band The Beach Boys. From reports, it was said that
Dennis picked up two of Manson women, particularly Patricia Krenwinkel and Ella Jo Bailey, and
brought them to his home at Pacific Palisades.
Unknown to him, the two women “reported” this encounter to Charles, so the next day, when Dennis
returned home, he was greeted by none other than Charles himself. Uncomfortable that there was a
stranger in his home, Dennis asked Charles if he had any intention of hurting him-- the “guru”
responded by kissing his feet.
From then on, the two developed a close relationship-- Dennis even paid for Charles’ songs just so
they could be recorded, he also introduced him to his friends who had roles in the entertainment
business. Before long, The Family moved in to Dennis’ home and they stayed there until Dennis’
manager asked them to move out.
In August of 1968, the entire cult moved to Spahn’s Movie Ranch owned by a nearly blind 80-year
old George Spahn. The girls of the Family helped in the ranch work, and at times, they would even
have sex with George, in return, he would let them reside in his home for free.
When the song Helter Skelter by the Beatles became famous, Charles was sure that he could outshine
them-- he had a vision that he could compose a song that would produce chaos, so he contacted Terry
Melcher, one of Dennis Wilson’s friends in the entertainment business. The whole Family expected
Terry to come, so they prepared meals and cleaned the house, however, Terry failed to arrive.
Angered by this, Charles went to 10050 Cielo Drive on March 23, 1969, expecting to talk to Terry,
however, he soon learned that he no longer resided in the area, the current tenants of the house were
actress Sharon Tate and her husband, director Roman Polanski. Charles left but he would soon send
his followers to perform one of the most gruesome murders in history.
On August 8, 1969, Charles talked to his trusted member Tex Watson and told him to bring 3 other
members, Patricia Krenwinkel, Linda Kasabian, and Susan Atkins, “to that house where Terry
Melcher used to live”. He ordered Tex to “destroy everyone in it, as gruesome as you can”. To the
girls, he told them to do as what Tex had instructed them to.
On August 9, 1969, Tex and the three women arrived at 10050 Cielo Drive where Sharon Tate, who
was 8 months pregnant, was staying with three other friends, namely: Jay Sebring, a hairstylist,
Wojciech Frykowski, a screenwriter, and his lover, the Coffee Bean heiress, Abigail Folger. Roman
Polanski, Sharon’s husband, was away in London.
When Tex’s team arrived at the house, Tex climbed up the telephone pole and cut the wire. On their
way to the residence, they encountered 18 year old Steven Parent, a friend of Sharon’s gardener. Tex
came at him with a knife even after the boy begged him not to hurt him. Afterwards, he shot Steven 4
times in the chest.
Tex entered the house through the window before letting the girls in and asked Linda Kasabian to be
the lookout. The whispering woke Wojciech Frykowski, who was sleeping on the living room couch.
With Charles’ orders clear in his mind, Tex kicked Wojciech Frykowski in the head and told him: “I
am the devil, and I am here to do the devil’s business,” then he roamed the house to collect the other
residents and brought them to the living room.
Sharon and Jay Sebring were bound together at their necks, and when Jay protested because they
were handling Sharon too roughly, Tex shot him. By this point, Abigail was brought back to the
bedroom because she promised to give them money, when she returned with her purse and $70, Tex
was already stabbing Jay repeatedly.
Wojciech, who was bound, tried to escape, but Tex also came at him and hit his head several times
with the gun; the impact was so hard that the gun was actually broken. As if that wasn’t enough, Tex
also stabbed him numerous times (51) before shooting him twice. Abigail also tried to escape, but
Patricia tackled and stabbed her before Tex finished her off.
Linda Kasabian, who was horrified with the disturbing sounds, falsely reported that someone was
coming, but her three companions wouldn’t listen. Despite Sharon’s plea to let her live long enough to
give birth to her baby, even offering to become a hostage, they still stabbed her 16 times while she
was calling out “Mother, mother...”
Before leaving the residence, they took the towel they used to bind Abigail and with Sharon’s blood,
they drew a pig. They did this in response to Charles’ order to “leave a sign... something witchy.” On
the way home, they changed their clothes and disposed the bloody ones in the hills together with their
weapons.
When they reported back to Charles, he wasn’t pleased that the murders turned out to be too chaotic,
so the next day, August 10, he accompanied the same 4 members to commit another murder, but this
time, he included 2 more killers--Leslie Van Houten and Steve Grogan.
Acting as the driver, Linda received the instructions and brought the group to 3301 Waverly Drive
where Leno LeBianca, a supermarket executive lived together with his wife, Rosemary, a dress shop
co-owner.
According to the girls (Susan Atkins and Linda Kasabian), Charles entered the house alone, initially,
before returning to them to report that he had bound the residents of the house.
He then took Tex with him, and ordered pillowcases to be put over the couple’s head; he used a lamp
cord to make sure the pillowcases stayed in position. After that, he went outside and called Leslie
and Patricia and told them to kill the LeBianca couple.
Tex ordered the women to return Rosemary to the bedroom first before he went on stabbing and
killing Leno. After a while, he heard commotions from the bedroom and saw that Rosemary had been
trying to escape by swinging a lamp at the girls, Tex remedied the situation by stabbing her.
After all the members had their fill of the stabbing spree, Patricia used Leno’s blood to write the
words “Rise” and “Death to pigs” on the wall, and then “Helter {sic} Skelter” on the refrigerator.
At first, the Family was arrested not because of the murders, but because of suspected vandalism, but
after Susan Atkins slipped about the murders, they were held for investigation, which of course,
officially pointed them as the killers responsible for the murders in Cielo Drive and the LeBianca
residence.
The police had long since struggled to understand Charles’ motivation, but most of their analysis led
to one thing: his pathological ego. First he believed that there would be a race war, a battle where in
the blacks would win, then, he thought that since the blacks lacked knowledge in ruling the world, his
Family would be the one to “mentor” them.
According to Leslie Van Houten, this was the reason why they murdered the LeBiancas: they planned
on taking Rosemary’s wallet and deposit it to a certain area in L.A where African-Americans lived.
Once they used the money, the murder could be pinned on them, hence whites would “hate” them and
the war (where they would be the primary beneficiary, since they were the leaders) would start.
Leslie Van Houten was only 19 when she committed the murders, but despite her young age and the
claim that Charles had used her vulnerability, she was still imprisoned. In 2006 and 2010, she
applied for parole, but both were not granted.
As for Sharon Tate’s murder, the Family said that it was nothing personal-- Charles just chose the
place because it had been a symbol of rejection.
During her time in prison, Susan Atkins showed she might be the “most disturbed killer” of the
Family, barring Charles of course.
In her confession to her jail mates, Susan said that they planned on killing other celebrities such as
Tom Jones, Elizabeth Taylor, Frank Sinatra and Steve McQueen. When she was asked “Why them?”
she admitted that they (the entire Family) wanted to commit crimes that would “shock” the world.
Disturbingly so, she also confessed that while they were killing Sharon Tate, she wanted to rip her
unborn child apart, but they lacked time to do so.
On November 18, 1969, the Family’s trial began, with young lawyer Ronald Hughes assigned to
defend Charles and Leslie. However, Ronald dropped Charles in favor of Leslie, since he believed
that she could convince the jury that she was just under Charles’ influence when she did the crime.
Robert’s decision could have cost him his life, because while he was camping, he disappeared. It
took several months before he was found dead; his body was already decomposing. It wasn’t verified
but many assumed that some members of the Family retaliated at Robert because he dropped their
leader.
During the trial, none of the murderers showed any remorse: frequently, the media had seen them
giggling and exchanging glances with each other. Charles even had the audacity to release his album
entitled “Lie”-- he tried to sell as many copies as he could to raise money for his defense.
His followers (the majority were girls) would often sit outside the court and wait for him, and when
Charles carved an “X” on his forehead, they even followed his example.
None of the murderers were sentenced with death because that penalty had already been abolished;
all of them were punished to serve their whole lives in prison except for Linda Kasabian who was
given immunity as a star witness.
How Charles managed to gain so many supporters is still anyone’s guess, but even in prison, he still
gained an ally in the person of Afton Burton who claimed that she and Charles would get married.
The former house where Sharon Tate and her friends were murdered has been demolished, but the
house that replaced it still stands there, although unoccupied.
Chapter 5 - Mother Murder

Susan Smith had a troubled childhood-- her parents, Linda and Harry Vaughan suffered many conflicts
due to Harry’s violence and alcoholism. The problems escalated so much that Michael, Linda’s son
to another man, attempted suicide when Susan was just in pre-school.
Fortunately, he survived, their childhoods, however, were forever ruined. Some of the neighbors
described Susan as an “unhappy” child and most of the time “She would stare into space like she
wasn’t there.”
When Harry and Linda divorced, Susan was devastated; according to reports, even though her
parents’ relationship was strained, she was still close to her father. The divorce made Harry’s
attitude even worse-- he became more depressed and turned more into alcoholism.
One time, Harry forced his way inside Linda’s home and the two fought so hard that Linda had to call
the police. When the police arrived, they saw Harry hit Linda; he didn’t fight the officers though, in
fact, he asked the police to place him in jail.
After the incident, Harry took a gun and shot himself in the stomach-- he didn’t survive.
2 weeks after the divorce was finalized, Linda married Beverly “Bev” Russel, a wealthy
businessman. Together with her children, she moved in to Bev’s residence in Mount Vernon Estate in
Union, South Carolina.
From there, things went downhill for Susan as Bev repeatedly molested her; what made it worse was
the whole family blamed Susan as well because she made it public by reporting it to the proper
authorities. After extreme pressure from Linda, Susan dropped the charges on Bev, and so, the
businessman was never punished.
In 1991, 20 year old Susan married David Smith (her co-worker in Winn-Dixie Supermarket) and the
two had their first born on May of the same year. Although the marriage was never blissful, the
couple tried to make it work, however, all their attempts were unsuccessful.
Their relationship caved, partly due to their own emotional instability and partly because of Linda’s
meddling. David reported that in their short marriage, Linda often made decisions for them regarding
everything, including how they should raise Michael.
Given their situation, when Susan became pregnant again, it was not a happy occasion, in fact, three
months after Alexander was born, the two decided that their relationship was over.
By this time, Susan already had a new job in Conso Products where she met another man, Tom
Findlay, a well-to-do man who had a bachelor’s degree and worked as the head of the Graphic
Designs department. However, after some time, Tom also rejected Susan’s affections, describing her
as “too possessive” and “too needy”.
Was this the reason why Susan killed her sons, Michael and Alex, on October 25, 1994?
On that day, Susan started her routines as usual: she dressed for work, fed her children breakfast, and
went to day care. She worked half the day before she approached her supervisor, Sandy Williams and
asked her if she could have the rest of the day off.
Sandy asked her what was wrong and Susan replied that she was upset because “someone I love
doesn’t love me back”. She also confided that it was Tom Findlay, and that the two of them were
impossible because of her children. Even after all these confessions, Susan didn’t go home, instead,
she went back to her desk and worked.
At 2:30 pm, she talked to Tom, who insisted that they could remain friends, but anything intimate was
out of the question, it couldn’t happen. Susan concocted a story that she was having an affair with
Tom’s father, just so she could “see his reaction”. At 4:30 pm, she tried to confess her lies, but Tom
wouldn’t talk to her.
She went home and described the rejection as “the saddest and loneliest in her life”. For an unknown
reason, Susan dressed her children that night and drove around Union.
At 9:00 pm, Shirley McCloud heard wailing sounds from the porch of her home, the woman, who
turned out to be Susan was shouting and asking for help because “a black man took her kids and her
car”. Rick, Shirley’s husband told their son to call 911.
After a series of interviews and polygraph tests, the police started suspecting Susan. First, in the
polygraph test question “Do you know where your children are?”, Susan’s result was- “Lie” (she also
took many lie-detector tests, and that particular question always resulted to “Lie”).
But what gave her away was the inconsistencies in her statements: a) she couldn’t clearly remember
where she was headed, b) she mentioned about a Red Light in Monarch Hills Intersection, and yet, c)
she said there were no other cars when the kidnapping occurred. After the investigation, the police
found out that the stop light at that intersection was permanently green, UNLESS, there was a car to
signal the switch.
When her conscience couldn’t take it anymore, Susan finally confessed that she had strapped her kids
in the car seats and let the car sink in the John D. Long Lake while they were innocently sleeping.
In her trial she claimed that she loved her sons very much, but the tension inside her was just too
much. Initially, she thought of suicide, but when she pondered on the fact that her children would
grow up without a mother, she decided that she should kill them first before killing herself.
To date, she is imprisoned in Leath Correctional Institution in Greenwood, South Carolina. She could
only be eligible for parole in 2024, once she had already served 30 years in jail.
Could Susan’s unthinkable crime have resulted from her own emotional instability, or was it brought
by her selfish desires?
Apparently, Susan had received a letter from Tom on October 17: although the tone was gentle and
calm, rejection was still oozing out of it. One part of the letter said, "You will, without a doubt, make
some lucky man a great wife. But unfortunately, it won't be me”.
While the other part mentioned: “But like I have told you before, there are some things about you that
aren't suited for me, and yes, I am speaking about your children."
In Tom’s letter, he had also pointed out that their upbringing was very different, and that if Susan
wanted to have a relationship with a “good guy like me”, she should act like a nice girl and should
never sleep with married man.
Conclusion

Thank you again for downloading this book!


All these 5 killers had unclear motivation on why they murdered many innocent people, but most of
the time, you could narrow down the reasons into two things: untreated psychological problems and a
troubled childhood.

I hope you enjoyed this book, thank you and good luck!
Check Out My Other Books
Below you’ll find some of my other popular books that are popular on Amazon and Kindle as well.
You can visit my author page on Amazon to see other work done by me. (Brody Clayton).

True Murder Stories


Women Who Kill
Serial Killers
Cold Cases True Crime
Serial Killers – Volume 2
Cold Cases True Crime – Volume 2
True Crime

If the links do not work, for whatever reason, you can simply search for these titles on the Amazon
website with my name to find them.
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