Luis Garavito Although many people generally stereotype serial killers as natural born killers, nevertheless, Luis Garavito was molded into a serial killer because of his terrible and troubled childhood. Garavito was a victim of constant sexual and physical abuse from both his father and two male neighbors. Due to these facts it can be inferred that there is a direct correlation between Garavito’s murderous spree and his childhood dilemmas. The definition of a serial killer is a person who kills three or more people over a time period that lasts more than a month. Usually the murders are linked to some sort of psychological benefit such as a search for dominance, playing out of fantasies or just plain and simple revenge. Luis Garavito was …show more content…
When investigated carefully there has always been a reason for our doings. There are certain factors that prompt an individual or a group to carry out their behaviors. Some of these aspects could be psychological problems that have plagued the person or it could be a physical problem. In the case of Luis Garavito, the trigger that sent him awry was the physical abuse he had received as a young boy. Garavito was the oldest of seven sons and grew up in an atmosphere of violence, often being beaten by his father and repeatedly being raped by two male neighbors (“Luis Alfredo Garavito Cubillos”). It can be clearly inferred that Garavito did not have the best of childhoods. The constant abuse he had received evidently messed him up. Although this is not an excuse for the horrid actions Garavito committed, it does serve as an explanation as to why he could do something so inhuman and have no …show more content…
In 1997 authorities in the city of Pereira discovered the mass grave that contained the bodies of 36 young boys. This triggered a manhunt for the ruthless murderer. 2 years later Garavito, was arrested on suspicion of raping a neighborhood child. A homeless man actually witnessed Garavito try to abuse the young boy and reported it to the police. The police then questioned the boy and got a description of the physical features of Garavito and then they leaked it to the public. Later that day a taxi driver recognized Garavito from the wanted ads and called the cops. The cops eventually arrested Garavito and put him in prison. After weeks of intense interrogation Luis Garavito came clean and confessed (“Luis Alfredo Garavito Cubillos”). Garavito’s killing spree brought a great scare upon the population of Colombia. Many people were terrified greatly for the lives of their children and many people even developed a phobia of going outside. The fact that at that time the police where very slow to catch the criminals made it even
Angel Gonzalez was an uneducated Hispanic man from Illinois who spoke little to know English. Him and another man were both accused of abducting a woman out of her apartment building and then raping her. Angel Gonzalez was convicted for a crime he didn’t commit because he signed a confession in English and he didn’t speak English; however due to the hard work of the innocence projects he was exonerated due to DNA evidence. On July 10 1994 a woman was abducted by two men and then raped.
Vincow was asleep in her Los Angeles home on the night of June 28, 1984, when Ramirez would sneak through her window, she’d left open. Ramirez then found Vincow and repeatedly stabbed her before slicing her throat. Throughout most of the attack, Vincow had been screaming, yet not even one of her neighbors would call the police. After cleaning up some of the blood splatter from the attack, Ramirez would ransack the house and steal what he thought was valuable. Vincows body wouldn’t be found until later that day when her son came to visit, but there was no sign or trace of who her killer was.
Torrence: It’s over. Look around. (cops begin to approach Arturo’s SUV from all angles) You’re not getting away this time. You’re going to jail for the rest of your life for all the crimes you have committed.
In which he got convicted of of and later released after serving 18 months of his 10 year conviction, due to good behavior. After finding this out his first wife then filed for divorce against Gacy. Then in 1975 Gacy continued with his offenses, after working long hours, then driving around to look for male prostitutes, and as well as runaway male teenagers. Of which he would then hide the bodies in the floorboards of his house, or when he ran out of room in his floorboards he would then throw them in the river down the street. With the stress of the murders the murders, Gacy got careless by offering a teenage boy (15 yrs old, Robert Piest) a better job than what he was working for.
The 79-year-old victim was sexually assaulted, stabbed and murdered in her own home. In just one year Ramirez had murdered over a dozen people and tortured of 25 people. After many delays, in 1989, Richard Ramirez, age 29, was sentenced to the conviction of 13 murders, five attempted murders, 11 sexual assaults and 14 burglaries. Ramirez was sentenced to die in California’s gas chamber. His remarks to this were “Big deal.
The Zodiac Killer was a famous serial killer. The difference between the Zodiac killer and other serial killers was that he would taunt the police publicly by writing letters to numerous local newspapers. Police link him to at least five murders between 1968 and 1969, and possibly more. The zodiac killer had no specific M.O which made it difficult for law enforcement to narrow down a suspect. To this day, police and investigators have never arrested the suspect whom he named himself the Zodiac Killer.
Jr. When they obtained a search warrant to investigate Gacy’s house, they made a gruesome discovery; “... police discovered the bodies of 29 boys and young men in a crawl space beneath Gacy’s house.”
In “What Makes a Serial Killer”, La Donna Beaty aims to provide an evidence regarding the most vital characteristics of a serial killer. Mainly, the information given in the article is based on eight different sources with the help of which the author supports her primary argument. There are four essential characteristics that the author distinguishes as being the most influential in terms of becoming a serial killer. Concretely, according to the presented theories, these characteristics include the impact of society, the general atmosphere within one 's family, the heavy use of alcohol and mental illnesses. Beaty 's essay is fairly an informative piece as suggesting what might form a serial killer, she does not say what she thinks may
As I was watching the interview, I was astonished. I expected Joel Rifkin to be the typical Hollywood serial killer: a deranged man set on revenge, as a result of being abused and neglected, and now was in chains behind glass with armed guards aiming their weapons at his head. Instead, I saw a stoic person who wasn’t behind glass or had a gun to his head. He just sat there and answered questions like a normal person. He wasn’t angry or remorseful.
From all of the hate he was getting from his surroundings peers and family members, Gacy started to change into a human monster from just a regular teenage
A serial killer can best be described as a person who commits a series or murders, often with no apparent motive and typically following a characteristic, predictable behavior pattern. A disturbing fact about serial killers is that most of them should be eminently identifiable. Serial killers commit their acts specifically in one place, therefore, give the residents of the community, its police force, and even their neighbors ample opportunity to find out what they are. The fact they are not caught is attributed to three factors. The first being the characteristics of the victims, which in Jeffrey Dahmer's case he prayed mostly on gay men.
Ricardo Leyva Muñoz Ramírez, AKA Richard Ramirez was a serial killer and rapist operating in the L.A. and San Francisco area, from 1984-85. He was called the night stalker by the news media and was one of the most vicious killers in U.S. history. Richard Ramirez’s early life was pretty good, even had his dad as a role model. Till he got hooked on drugs, then he found a new role model. His cousin Mike who was vietnam veteran decided to show some polaroid photos of people he’s killed, but not on duty.
They often develop the feeling that they have to create their own center of stability. Gacy rationalized everything he did. To maintain an appearance of innocence, he would twist the truth so he could be viewed as doing no wrong doing. In addition, Gacy always wanted to be in control of social situations. His friends later characterized him as a person who manipulated situations and people to his advantage, and tried to control them (Egger 129).
One of the most notorious killers to ever be put behind bars with the help fingerprint evidence was the Night Stalker also known as, Richard Ramírez. This serial killer terrorized California with his brutal, year-long killing spree in which he murdered 14 individuals. Thanks in part to modern forensic technology and the discovery of this psycho’s fingerprints, police were able to put a swift end to his butchery before he could kill even more innocent people. Born on February 28, 1960 in El Paso, Texas, Richard Ramírez was the youngest of seven children to his parents, Mercedes and Julian Ramírez. His father Julian was a former Mexican police officer who moved to America and worked as a laborer on the railroad.
The theory used in this journal pertains to the race, age, and gender of a serial killer; how they kill, the race, age, and gender of the victim; and how the killer lived before and during the killings. Before beginning his own study, Pakhomou (2004) found that “Serial (sexual killers are believed to be mostly white males in their twenties and thirties (at the time of the crimes) with above-average intelligence who commit intra-racial (within the same racial group) murders of strangers” (p. 220). Approximately half of them never had consensual sex with another adult, some joining the military, about half did not finish high school, and they had a history of burglary and sexual offenses prior to murders. There is no set reason or evidence that explains why people commit sexual homicide; however, there are many theories. One set factor that all researchers agree on is that “the most monstrous and most perverse sexual acts are usually committed by persons of sound mind, who are functionally rigid (in terms of a number of activities that they carry on), obsessed with fantasy and who have a determination to do what they want” (Pakhomou, 2004, p. 221).