Massachusetts Serial Killers is a two-part slideshow/lecture in which methods of criminal profiling are discussed along with three historical cases of serial murder in Massachusetts. 10 More Evil Serial Killers That Are Still On The Run. While most serial killers leave bodies. Massachusetts, dumping the bodies at the side of the.
In the 1890s this was the nickname given to Lizzie Halliday, New York’s first known female serial killer. She was also the first woman to ever be sentenced to death by the electric chair although that sentence was never carried out.
Lizzie emigrated to the states as a child and as she got older showed a propensity to experience what would be later called “spells of insanity.” Halliday committed at least four murders including two women she was old friends with and her sixth husband who she stabbed, shot, and mutilated. Yes, sixth. Of the previous five, she is suspected of killing possibly two of them and attempted to kill another by poisoning with arsenic.
She also had a love of burning things. In 1888, she burned down the saloon of the two female “old friends” that she would later murder and burned both the barn and house of her sixth husband who she would later murder.
Apprehended and sentenced to death by electrocution, the governor of New York went on to commute her sentence and instead institutionalized her for being mentally insane. She was sent to the Matteawan State Hospital for the Criminally Insane where she would live out the rest of her life. While there, she attacked and killed a nurse by stabbing her 200 times with a pair of scissors.
Arohn Kee was a serial murderer and rapist who had a sick penchant for forced sodomy of teenage girls who lived in several different Harlem housing projects. He took his first victim in 1991.
All told, Kee raped and murdered by strangulation three separate girls Paola Illera, 13, Johalis Castro, 19, and Rasheeda Washington 18 over the course of eight years. Castro’s body he burned beyond all recognition and could only be identified by her ankle bracelet. During this time he also raped and committed forced sodomy against four other teenage girls.
Once arrested, Kee conducted an incredible rant in court where he claimed he was the victim of a massive conspiracy involving DNA swapping. At the end of the trial, Kee declared “Fuck all o’ y’all!” to the entire courtroom. He was convicted as a result of the massive DNA evidence and the testimony of the rape victims he hadn’t killed and, in 2001, was sentenced to three life sentences for the murders and 400 years for the rapes.
From prison, Kee later made twenty 5 x 7 inch “rape cards” which depicted handwritten accounts of his crimes and the things he had said to his victims including “Say, ‘I love it’,” “Be quiet and take it like a woman,” and “Act like you love me.”
Described by some completely oblivious individual as a “devoted” mother, Schenectady, NY resident Marybeth Tinning is actually a serial child murderer but unlike other cases of child murder all these children were her own.
From 1975 to 1985, Tinning gave birth to or adopted a total of nine babies, boys and girls. None of these children lived past their fifth birthday and most died within a few months of being born. Tinning was a regular in Schenectady hospital trauma centers where she would bring her dead offspring in a panic saying they weren’t breathing. Hospitals consistently declared the cause of death as being Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) but literally no one ever caught on that nine dead children from SIDS was a statistical impossibility.
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Tinning’s ultimate motivation for these murders, according to investigators, was to garner sympathy and attention. They believe that after each baby’s death, Tinning got a kind of emotional high from the attention she received which included police on manhunts in the search for people who might have smothered her children but who, in reality, did not exist at all.
Tinning was finally investigated after a call to the police from the hospital where she took her ninth child, three-month-old Tami Lynne, after she claimed she found Tami unconscious in her crib with blood coming out of her mouth. Once arrested, Tinning admitted to the murder and confessed that she’d also been slowly poisoning her husband.
Despite ample circumstantial evidence in the form of eight child corpses, Tinning was only charged with the death of Tami Lynne. She was found guilty and remains in prison where she has been denied parole four times because she continues “to demonstrate no insight into her crime.”
On March 25th, 1990, Julio Gonzalez went to see his ex-girlfriend, Lydia Feliciano, at the “Happy Land” club in the Bronx where she worked as a coat check girl. The club had previously been shut down for code violations. Lydia had recently broken up with Gonzalez and when he arrived he had been drinking. Predictably, the brief meeting turned into an argument before bouncers tossed him from the club.
What happened next was not so predictable. Having vowed to Lydia that “Tomorrow you’re not going to work here any more. I told you and I swear it,” Gonzalez went and purchased gasoline in a jug, brought it back to Happy Land and doused the place, including the stairs, lit it, and left.
The venue had sealed all the exits save the main entrance in order to keep people from getting in for free. All told, 87 people burned to death in the Happy Land club. Lydia, presumably the main object of Gonzalez’s rage, however, did not burn in the fire but was actually the first to notice it and leave. She claims that she warned others but no one and I mean no one heard her at all.
So exhausted was he from burning 87 people alive that Gonzalez went straight home and went to sleep which is where police later found and arrested him. He was later sentenced to 25 years to life.
By all accounts, Waneta Hoyt was a good mother who’d simply had a string of bad luck…over and over and over again. From 1965 to 1971, Waneta had five children and, one by one, they all seemingly succumbed to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). No one gave it a second thought until 1995 when authorities from a neighboring county began looking at SIDS deaths in the area again with the idea that some of them might be murder.
Hoyt confessed to the murders by suffocation when faced with authorities and was tried and sentenced to 75 years to life. She died in 1998 of pancreatic cancer while still appealing her sentence. Since she died before her appeal could be heard, New York state officially exonerated her.
Martha Beck had a harrowing upbringing. Not only was she burdened with an overbearing a brutal mother but she was relentlessly teased in school and, far worse, at the age of ten she had already suffered rape at the hands of her own brother.
Raymond Fernandez, soon to become Beck’s partner in crime, was a brain damaged former British intelligence agent who had a pattern of answering “lonely hearts ads” and then filching the women who placed them for everything they were worth. In 1947 he answered an ad placed by single mother of two, Martha Beck.
Beck was obsessed with a need for male acceptance and, after spending only a short time with Fernandez, she abandoned both of her children in Florida and moved to New York to live with him. Even when Fernandez confessed that he was a scam artist and possibly a murderer, Beck wasn’t swayed and instead began posing as Fernandez’s sister to facilitate the scam.
Only two years later, catching Fernandez in bed with one of his marks, Janet Fay, Beck smashed Fay’s head in with a hammer and Fernandez finished the job by strangling her to death. The couple then fled New York for Michigan and moved in with a widow and her daughter. Beck’s insane temper got the best of her once again and she shot the widow before later drowning the daughter for crying.
Eventually arrested, both were executed in the electric chair in New York in March 1951. Their last words were of their love for one another.
“I wanna shout it out; I love Martha! What do the public know about love?” – Raymond Fernandez.
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“My story is a love story. But only those tortured by love can know what I mean […] Imprisonment in the Death House has only strengthened my feeling for Raymond….” – Martha Beck
By all accounts the most accomplished murderer on this list, Richard Kuklinksi was an Italian mob contract killer known as the ‘Iceman’ because he engaged in a practice of freezing the bodies of his victims in an industrial cooler in order to hide the time of their murder. There are other supposed origins to this nickname and Kuklinski seemed to revel in changing the story as well as telling others including that he he was part of the group who murdered union boss Jimmy Hoffa which he later recanted.
Kuklinkski was very thorough and intelligent. In one instance he killed a man seemingly accidentally but still took the precaution of cutting off all the man’s fingers and removing all of his teeth by hand so that even if he disposed of the body and it was later found the man would never be able to be identified.
All told, Kuklinksi killed between six and 100 people between 1949 and 1986. And although Kuklinski appears to have been the kind of man who would exaggerate, tales of Kuklinski’s willingness to murder for as little as making him “feel bad about something” seem nearly ubiquitous. Murdering his first victim at age 13, Kuklinksi has been described by New York authorities as one of the most dangerous criminals in the state’s entire history.
Kuklinski died in prison in 2006.
Richard Angelo should have been on of the good ones. An EMT at Good Samaritan Hospital in Long Island, NY, Angelo had been an Eagle Scout and a volunteer fireman. His background profile was of a person who cared about serving others. This was not the case.
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Feeling unappreciated in his job as a nurse, Angelo began inducing emergencies in the patients at Good Samaritan by injecting them with paralytic agents Pavulon and Anectine because he wanted to be the one that would save them. Initially this strategy worked and Angelo received the praise he sought from his co-workers and the patients he had “saved.”
However, for 25 of the 37 patients he did this with it did not work and Angelo was unable to save them in time. What’s more, people began to notice a pattern of emergencies during Angelo’s shift which caused them to become suspicious. This all came to a head when one patient, seeing that Angelo was injecting him with something, managed to hit their ‘call’ button notifying the nursing staff to his plight. The contents Angelo was attempting to administer were analyzed and he was found out. Later, police discovered these same paralyzing agents in Angelo’s home.
When interviewed by authorities regarding the murders, Angelo claimed he did it because he suffered, essentially, from low self-esteem.
“I wanted to create a situation where I would cause the patient to have some respiratory distress or some problem, and through my intervention or suggested intervention or whatever, come out looking like I knew what I was doing. I had no confidence in myself. I felt very inadequate.”
Angelo was sentenced to 61 years in prison.
This is the only political case of this entire list and one of the more controversial ones.
A member of the leftist domestic terror group the Weather Underground (WU), Boudin was first arrested in 1970 after prematurely setting off a nail bomb she and another WU member were building and which was ultimately intended to be used against U.S. soldiers at Fort Dixon, New Jersey. Released on bond, Boudin skipped town only to reappear eleven years later working as a getaway truck driver with the Black Liberation Army in the robbery of an armored car carrying 1.6 million dollars.
The U-Haul getaway truck was spotted and two officers then pulled it over. However, they were expecting to be confronted with the Black men who had just been spotted robbing the armed car, not Boudin. Police officers later testified that Boudin exited the vehicle with her hands up and implored them to lower their weapons even as two more officers arrived. Officers maintained that Boudin attempted to lull them into a false sense of security. Boudin maintained that she stayed silent.
Regardless, at no time did she warn them that there were six men armed with automatic weapons in the back of the U-Haul. As a result, when the robbers leapt from the back of the truck and opened fire on the officers they were caught completely unaware and two were killed.
Boudin, trying to escape on foot, was quickly nabbed as were most of the other robbers and WU members although two were shot and killed. Boudin was later tried along with the other members of the robbery crew. Boudin received by far the lightest sentence of 25 years to life perhaps because her father was a well-known and connected attorney himself and her attorney was able to arrange a plea bargain of one count of felony murder and one count of felony robbery. Most others involved in the robbery and shootings received triple that.
Boudin was paroled in 2003 and has since been an adjunct professor at Columbia University and a scholar in-residence at the NYU School of Law. She is well known for her AIDS activism and scholarly work in education both during and since her release from prison.
Another serial killer who preyed solely on women, Rifkin is responsible for the murder and, in some cases, dismemberment of seventeen women he claimed were prostitutes. He was the most prolific serial killer in New York’s entire 20th century history.
Rifkin came from a fairly normal background and was of above average intelligence. Articles on his life indicate that he was teased heavily in school where he performed poorly and also began having fantasies of killing women. Later, out of school, he was unable to hold down a job. At some point he began soliciting prostitutes while, at the same time, he developed a fascination with serial killers who murdered prostitutes even going so far as to collect newspaper clippings on the topic.
In 1989 an 1990, Rifkin finally began making news of his own by murdering two women whose bodies he then dismembered and threw into the Manhattan canals. Their remains were never discovered. In 1991, Rifkin stepped up his activities and over the next two years he killed fifteen women and usually disposed of their bodies in a container of some kind which he then threw into a body of water.
Rifkin was finally caught during a routine traffic stop where officers attempted to pull him over for not displaying and tags. Rifkin didn’t stop and it wasn’t until he missed a turn and wrecked that officers discovered that he was towing the body of his latest victim no doubt taking it to be dumped somewhere. Rifkin was imprisoned and is available for parole in 2197 at which time he will be dead.