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NIGEL CAWTHORNE is the author of Th e World's Greatest Serial Killers, and Killers: Th e Most Barbaric Murderers of Our Tim es, as well as numerous other books. His writing has appeared in over a hundred and fifty newspapers, magazines and partworks - from the Sun to the Financial Tim es, and from Fla tbush Life to Th e New York Trib. He lives in London. I - Ki .. ers at Large . I R 8J .. London Constable & Robinson Ltd 3 The Lanchesters 162 Fulham Palace Road London W69ER www.constablerobinson.com First published in the UK by Robinson, an imprint of Constable & Robinson Ltd, 2007 Copyright © Nigel Cawthorne, 2007 All rights reserved. This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. A copy of the British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data is available from the British Library. ISBN: 978-1-84529-631-5 eISBN: 978-1-78033-362-5 Printed and bound in the EU 13579108642 Contents Introduction Part I: American Psychos Ann Arbor Hospital Homicides Atlanta 's Child Killers Atlanta 's Prostitute Killers Atlanta 's Ripper Atlanta 's Son of Sam Austin 's Servant Girl Annihilator The Baton Rouge Serial Killer Charlotte, N.C.'s Killers Chicago 's Crack-Head Killers Chicago 's Tylenol Terrorist The Cincinnati Carbon-CopyKilling s Cincinnati 's Cumminsville Killings Cleveland's Torso Murders The Connecticut River Valley Killings Denver's Down-and-Out Destroyer Detroit's Babysitter Killer The Fiend of Flint, Michigan The Florida Lady Killer The Fort Lauderdale Lacerater The Grand Rapids Grim Reaper The 1-10 Long-Distance Lorry Driver of Death The 1-35 Killer The 1-70 - "America's Sewer Pipe" The 1-70/1-35 Shootist Kansas City's Independence Avenue Killer The La Crosse Drownings Los Angeles ' South Side Slayer Madison's Capital City Murders Massachusetts' Murderers Newark's Nixings New Haven Homicides The New Jersey Sea-Shore Slayings New Orleans ' Mad Axeman New Orleans ' Waterside Slayings Oklahoma City's OKC Serial Killer Oradell, N.J. ' s Doctor X Philadelphia's Frankford Slasher The Phoenix Baseline Killer Pittsburgh 's Prostitute Killer Rapid City's Creek Killings Rochester, N.Y. 's Alphabet Murders The San Diego Strangler San Francisco 's Zodiac Killer The Sonoma County Slayings Southern California 's Original Night Stalker The Southern Pacific Railroad Axeman St Louis ' Slayings Texas ' "Highway to Hell" The Texarkana Phantom The Toledo Clubber The Twin Cities ' Killer Virginia's Colonial Parkway Killer Washington, D.C.'s Petworth Prostitute Killer Washington, D.C.'s Suitland Slayings Washington, D.C.'s Freeway Phantom Washington State Serial Killers Part II: Killers Stalk the Globe Argentina's Highway Maniac Australia's Claremont Killer Belgium 's Butcher of Mons The Butcher of Belize The Boy Killers of Brazil Brazil 's Killer Beach Canada's Beast of British Columbia Canada's "Highway of Tears " Costa Rica 's Psychopath England - Jack the Ripper England - Jack the Stripper England and Wales - Operation Enigma Ghana 's Assassin of Accra Guatemala's Plague of Death Iran 's Spider Killings Ireland's Dublin Death-Dealer Italy 's Gay Killings Italy 's Monster of Florence Mexico 's Juarez Ripper Portugal 's Lisbon Ripper Russia's Rippers Scotland - Glasgow 's Bible John Scotland - Glasgow 's Sex-Worker Slayings South Africa 's Serial Killers Introduction There are serial killers everywhere. They inhabit our nightmares. Some have long careers. It took detectives 15 years to track down Gary Leon Ridgway, the Green River Killer who was responsible for the murder of at least 49 women in Washington State. Having passed a polygraph test in 1984, he was arrested in 2001 after DNA evidence linked him to his victims. He plea-bargained his way out of a death sentence and was sentenced to 49 life terms with no possibility of parole. Dennis Rader - the BTK "Bind Torture Kill" Strangler murdered ten in Kansas between 1974 and 1991. He was only caught in 2005 after he began taunting the authorities in a series of letters to the Wichita Eagle. Eventually he was persuaded to send in his writings on floppy disk. Forensic examination of the disk revealed it had previously been used by the Christ Lutheran Church, along with the name Dennis. A quick Internet search revealed that Rader was president of the church council. He showed no remorse and was given ten consecutive life terms, requiring that the 61-year-old Rader serves at least 175 years before being eligible for parole. He is held in solitary confinement. Fred and Rosemary West went on a killing spree that lasted 37 years. He was charged with 11 murders, though boasted he had killed many more before he hanged himself in his cell in 1995. Rosemary West was found guilty of ten murders and sentenced to life with a recommendation from the judge that she never be released. Dr Harold Shipman killed more than 250 over his 30-year career, though the true number will never be known. After being convicted on 15 sample charges - and sentenced to 15 life terms - he committed suicide in jail without confessing or explaining his crimes. Prolific American serial killer Henry Lee Lucas claimed to have killed over 3,000 people in a career that might have lasted for 32 years. A more likely number is 350 - among the victims was his own mother, whom he killed in 1960. Released in 1975, he went on the rampage with fellow serial killer Otis Toole until they were arrested in 1983. Toole died from cirrhosis of the liver in prison in Florida while serving six life sentences. George W. Bush agreed to the commutation of Lucas 's death sentence - the only time he did so while Governor of Texas - and Lucas died of heart failure in jail in March 2001. While these killers were eventually caught, there are plenty who have not been caught. The FBI estimate that there are between 35 to 50 serial killers at large in the United States. Other estimates put the number of killers closer to 500. In either case officials expect these numbers to continue their dramatic rise. As long ago as 1984 the FBI Behavioral Unit study of serial murder said that serial killing had reached "an almost epidemic proportion". It is believed that presently there are up to 6,000 people a year dying in the hands of a serial killer in the US alone. Until recently serial killing has been thought of as a North American activity, though the British have struggled to produce some notably colourful cases. But now serial killing seems to be on the rise across the globe. Serial killing has become part of the national landscape in South Africa and the former Soviet Union. Even historically peaceful places such as Costa Rica and Belize now have their own serial killer. Although it was once thought of as the province of predominantly brooding white loners, black men now join in, along with family men and those generally regarded as the life and soul of the party. Myra Hindley, Rosemary West and Aileen Wuornos have shown that even women are joining in. But the Mammoth Book of Killers at Large concentrates on those killers who have not yet been caught. Many are current killers who might, at this very moment, be out stalking their victims. Others are less active, while some criminologists believe that serial killers only stop because they are dead or in jail. But Dennis Rader was dormant for 14 years before his boastfulness got the better of him. During that time he was a family man, a pillar of the community and an elected official. Other killers, once an area gets too hot for them, simply move on. In some cases, the killer has been cleared by a court and is thus at large to kill again. In others, a man who is plainly not guilty has been railroaded by the system, while the real perpetrator goes free. And sometimes a culprit has been jailed for a series of killings, then blamed for others he has not been convicted of, or even charged with, that may well be the work of another. It is always tempting for a police department to clear its books by attributing numerous unsolved crimes to a fall guy who has already been convicted of something else. I have also included some historic cases for completeness. True, Jack the Ripper can no longer be alive. But he was never caught or even convincingly identified. He is of enduring interest. New theories about him emerge regularly and he intersects interestingly with other, more up-to-date, cases. Part I American Psychos Perhaps because murder is the stock in trade of the Hollywood thrillers, America seems to have cornered the market in coldhearted killing. The United States has a history of violence that goes back to the foundation of the colonies there. Before Australia became Britain's penal colony, British felons could expect to be transported to North America to work on the plantations there. Among them were numerous murderers who had escaped the hangman by taking "benefit of clergy". If a criminal could claim to the authorities that he was a clergyman, he would be handed over to be tried by the ecclesiastical courts which could not impose the death sentence. In the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries, to demonstrate that you were a clergyman, all you had to do was show that you were literate.