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Titulo Original: Documentário Como pensam e agem os Serial Killers
Canal Autor (Nome): Lukevi
Canal Autor (Link): https://www.youtube.com/@lukevi9250
Fonte do Video (Link): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oi5IbrdXyAo
Licenca: Este conteudo e reutilizado sob a Licenca Creative Commons Atribuicao 4.0 Internacional (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Note: The original content has not been modified. / O conteudo original foi mantido integralmente.
Canal Autor (Nome): Lukevi
Canal Autor (Link): https://www.youtube.com/@lukevi9250
Fonte do Video (Link): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oi5IbrdXyAo
Licenca: Este conteudo e reutilizado sob a Licenca Creative Commons Atribuicao 4.0 Internacional (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Note: The original content has not been modified. / O conteudo original foi mantido integralmente.
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TVTranscrição
00:08Predators whose prey are other people.
00:12He was the most efficient killing machine we've ever seen.
00:18Some do more than just kill.
00:20What was he trying to do?
00:21He listened to my heart and went so far as to say he was going to eat my heart.
00:25Scientists say the brain may be programmed to kill.
00:30It makes no sense to keep me alive because I would kill again.
00:34They could be your neighbors.
00:36They tend to blend into the community, but they kill instantly.
00:40One of them, in Hungary, killed more than 600, and some hunt in packs.
00:46Nurses who kill patients often act alone.
00:49In this case, no.
00:51But some people find them irresistible.
00:53I want to say that I am very happy to have married Richard and to be his wife.
00:59Discover everything you need to know about serial killers.
01:04Why do sharks never stop swimming?
01:06Am I safer on a bridge or in my car?
01:10Will we ever get to the point of transplanting a human brain?
01:12What regulates body temperature?
01:14And does it leave the blood hot or cold?
01:18Are there more natural disasters now than before?
01:22Inside the story: serial killers.
01:30These men are all great murderers.
01:32But they are not serial killers.
01:36To be considered a serial killer by the FBI,
01:39A criminal needs to kill at least three victims.
01:43But it's not just about counting bodies.
01:47Criminals such as mobsters and terrorists do not fit the profile.
01:51So, what makes a serial killer different?
01:54They blend into the community.
01:56They are ordinary people.
01:57I would never have suspected them.
01:59They are brilliant, charming, and captivating.
02:02But they would kill him in an instant.
02:04Serial killers have no financial or political motives.
02:08They kill for pleasure.
02:12But these killers are rare.
02:14In the United States, from 1975 to 1995,
02:19On average, only 0.5% of murderers were serial killers.
02:24Ted Bundy is perhaps the perfect example.
02:27A model of a police database.
02:30His crimes exhibit many characteristics typical of a serial killer.
02:35He was the most efficient killing machine I've ever encountered among the serial killers I've studied.
02:42It has become a standard for evaluating others in the same category.
02:47This is how his criminal career began.
02:49Shortly after midnight on January 4, 1974,
02:54He entered Johnny Lenz's room.
02:56an 18-year-old student from the University of Washington,
02:58and struck her with a crowbar while she slept.
03:03Over the next six months, he tracked down and killed seven more female college students in Washington state.
03:08But it wasn't a deadly wave.
03:11Among his crimes, he exhibited social behavior.
03:14An apparently normal state called the Mask of Sanity.
03:19He had a university education and worked on local political campaigns.
03:25This alter ego was so captivating that, during his trial, he became a media star.
03:30This is my chance to speak to the press.
03:32This contravenes section 78204 of Florida law.
03:35I will plead my innocence now.
03:39Even the judge was won over.
03:41He's a smart boy.
03:43He would have been a good lawyer.
03:45I would have loved to see you act, but you chose to follow a different path.
03:49Bundy was what the FBI calls an organized hitman.
03:54He planned the murders carefully.
03:56He tracked the victims for weeks.
03:59Just one example.
04:01In Murray, Utah, in November 1974, he disguised himself as a police officer.
04:07He lured Carol Derronche to his car and tried to handcuff her.
04:13She ran away.
04:16However, many others succumbed to its charm.
04:19He would pretend to have a broken arm or leg to convince the young women to help him so he could...
04:24to imprison them and kill them.
04:26He investigated the victims for weeks before approaching them.
04:31He would break into their apartments or cars.
04:33He researched them so he could make the best possible approach and seduce them.
04:38so that he could do whatever he wanted with them and kill them.
04:43His cold, calculating precision is typical of serial killers.
04:49John Wayne Gacy was a successful businessman.
04:53He threw parties for the neighbors and dressed up as a clown to entertain children in local hospitals.
04:57No one could have imagined that he had killed more than 30 boys.
05:02Another killer, Dennis Rader, was a Boy Scout leader and active in his church.
05:08But he immobilized, tortured, and killed 10 people over a period of 30 years.
05:15There is something else that links Bundy to these other serial killers.
05:19He was a psychopath.
05:20He had no empathy for the suffering of others and no remorse for his crimes.
05:26Psychopaths typically experience no fear and do not react to threats of punishment.
05:32They feel no guilt.
05:34That's not part of their psychological makeup.
05:37These killers may not realize it, but they know that what they are doing is illegal.
05:43They are generally deemed fit to stand trial.
05:45They are legally sound.
05:48This is not always the case with mass murderers.
05:51Unbalanced people who have breakdowns and take others down with them.
05:54like the Columbine shooters, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold.
05:59Ted Bundy didn't go crazy.
06:01His IQ was above average.
06:04He carefully planned the murders.
06:07But in the end, he wasn't clever enough to escape punishment for his heinous acts.
06:12Therefore, this court has ruled that you, Theodore Robert Bundy,
06:17He is guilty of first-degree murder and will be sentenced to death.
06:23In 1989, after a decade on death row,
06:27The electric chair took Bundy's life.
06:37How do you catch a serial killer?
06:40You need to think like an ANSAP, the FBI term for an unknown subject.
06:46Criminal profiling aims to discover what type of person would commit this crime.
06:52Not exactly the person who committed it, but what kind of person.
06:56These researchers are blurring the line between law enforcement and psychology.
07:01When they look at evidence, they expect to think or conclude like the murderer.
07:06This criminal investigation or analysis, as the FBI calls it, has some crucial stages.
07:14Analyzing the victim reveals something about the killer.
07:25These men have an innate ability to identify vulnerable women.
07:33Naive women, women with little life experience or low self-esteem.
07:41The state of the crime scene is perhaps the biggest clue in putting together a portrait of a serial killer.
07:48Who was the victim, how did the crime occur, what efforts were made to dispose of the body?
07:54These decisions made by the killer help the investigator determine the type of person responsible.
08:00An impulsive person acts without thinking.
08:03The crime scene may be very neglected.
08:07On the other hand, if the person is cold and calculating,
08:12This type of behavior also appears at crime scenes.
08:17Investigators learn to think like criminals.
08:20In general, they are white men, often with a dominant mother or female figure, and an absent father.
08:26And as they develop these maladjusted personalities,
08:29They suffer from a certain psychological deviation, let's say.
08:32and they start acting between the ages of 25 and 29.
08:37But it's not easy to penetrate the minds of these murderers.
08:41One of those killers told me,
08:43You'll run when you're stressed, Dr. Hick.
08:46I kill someone when I'm stressed.
08:50I feel much better.
08:59This is something that's hard to swallow.
09:01Some people make a living selling items related to serial killers.
09:05This is called murderabilia in English.
09:09Here are some pictures of assassins.
09:11Comic books.
09:12Flexible dolls.
09:14There was even a game about the subject sold in a body bag.
09:18Sometimes, the criminals themselves participate in this morbid market.
09:26John Wengase earned over $100,000 from his paintings made in prison.
09:31The most famous of these depicted him as Pogo the Clown.
09:35Pogo the Clown appeared on album and CD covers and became his trademark.
09:43One of my favorite pieces, and one of the most unique in the collection, is a painting he sent as a gift.
09:51For my son.
09:53His execution only increased the value of his art.
09:56But the families of nine of his victims reacted.
10:00They bought 25 of his paintings and burned them.
10:03We gave these people a sort of cult status.
10:07where probably everyone in this country knows who Jeffrey Dahmer, John Gacy, and Ted Bundy are.
10:14But I doubt that anyone, absolutely anyone, knows the name of one of his victims.
10:21State governments are also taking action.
10:24More than 40 states have passed laws making it illegal for murderers to profit from their crimes.
10:29Our media has made them so intelligent, sexy, and clever that they seem glamorous.
10:40But very few cereal killers are like that.
10:44But the indirect sale of these items is still permitted in most states.
10:52Many people believe that the United States is the world capital of killer cereals.
10:56But some of history's most prolific killers are not American.
11:02Here are three of the flowers.
11:04There is the monster of the Andes.
11:07Born in Colombia in 1949, Pedro Alonso López claimed to have killed more than 300 girls in Colombia, Ecuador, and
11:14in Peru.
11:19López was arrested in 1980, but released by the Ecuadorian government, which deported him to Colombia.
11:25His current whereabouts are unknown.
11:28There's also Dr. Morty.
11:32In a quiet town in northern England, Dr. Harold Shepard killed more than 200 of his patients in one period.
11:39a 20-year period that began in 1975.
11:42He injected lethal doses of morphine into his elderly patients.
11:46Then she would falsify medical records to make it appear that they were frail and died of natural causes.
11:53His career ended in 1998 when he attempted to forge the will of victim Kathleen Grandy in order to steal half a million dollars.
12:02He hanged himself in his cell in January 2004.
12:07And finally, we have the Vampire Countess.
12:11Yes it is true.
12:12The worst serial killer in history was a woman.
12:16Erjabeth Bertori was a 16th-century Hungarian aristocrat.
12:22She was only charged with 80 murders, but according to rumors, she killed around 650 women.
12:28She attacked peasant women, biting into their flesh while torturing them to death.
12:34She also drank and bathed in his blood.
12:37No one dared arrest a Countess, but that changed when she started killing noble girls.
12:44She died in 1614, after three and a half years in prison.
12:51Some murderers do more than just drink the blood of their victims.
12:55They eat its flesh.
12:57On July 22, 1991, Tracy Edwards ran away from a building in Milwaukee.
13:04He had just escaped from Jeffrey Demmer's house.
13:08When the police investigated the smelly apartment, they found body parts in jars containing formaldehyde.
13:14Human flesh in the freezer and a severed head in the refrigerator.
13:18Then, Tracy Edwards gave the court a horrifying summary of Demmer's behavior.
13:24What did you think he was doing with his head?
13:26He listened to my heart and went so far as to say he was going to eat my heart.
13:32Necrophilia.
13:32Satanic worship and cannibalism were part of the grotesque ritual.
13:38But Demmer certainly isn't the only serial cannibal.
13:43Arthur Shawcross killed two children in 1972.
13:47He was arrested and released 15 years later.
13:51He moved to Rochester, New York, and over the next two years killed 11 women.
13:57He claims to have eaten parts of three of his victims.
14:06I cut off parts of the body and ate them.
14:16Why don't I know?
14:19The cannibal Andrei Chikatilo, known as the Rostov Strifer, killed at least 53.
14:26In 1931, during the Ukrainian famine, his brother Stefan disappeared, allegedly kidnapped and eaten by starving neighbors.
14:35He attributed his appetite for human flesh to this childhood experience.
14:40These cannibals have one thing in common.
14:42They were all arrested.
14:44But there's still one on the loose.
14:48Seis Sagawa confessed to killing and eating a Dutch student in Paris in 1981.
14:56I took the body to the bathroom and started cutting it.
15:05I chose a small fork and tried to spear it, but I couldn't.
15:12So I grabbed a large knife and stabbed him.
15:19French authorities confined Sagawa to a hospital for criminals in Santos.
15:25The French eventually deported Sagawa to Japan.
15:28He stayed in a psychiatric hospital for only a year, when the doctors declared him cured and discharged him.
15:35He became a cult celebrity in Japan.
15:39And he claims he will not kill again.
15:44Some people hate it when I appear in public.
15:48They say I'm a carnivore, a murderer.
15:54Sometimes I wonder why I'm alive.
15:58I should be dead.
16:04Creation.
16:05Nature.
16:08What creates these monsters?
16:11Are they born this way or do they become this way?
16:14When dealing with serious murderers, the relevant sociological factor is the mistreatment suffered in childhood.
16:22An FBI study of 36 convicted sexual predators and serial killers revealed some disturbing statistics about their childhoods.
16:3074% reported psychological abuse, 42% were physically abused, and 43% were sexually abused.
16:40Over 50% had parents with a history of mental illness or criminal records.
16:48For example, when serial killer Edmund Kemper was 8 years old, his mentally unstable mother kept him locked in the basement.
16:57Edmund Kemper harbored a great deal of anger towards women and felt powerless in the face of his mother.
17:03He wanted revenge on his mother and also wanted to control other women.
17:09Seventeen years later, Kemper's mother became one of his last victims.
17:15I beheaded him and then degraded his corpse.
17:23And that's it.
17:25Six girls killed because of how she raised her son and how her son was raised.
17:33Henry Lee Lucas's mother beat him and forced him to watch her prostitute herself in their small cabin.
17:39She also sent him to school dressed as a girl.
17:43Years later, he killed 11 people.
17:47John Wayne Gacy's alcoholic father beat him savagely and ridiculed him by calling him homosexual.
17:54Although Gacy was married twice and had two children, he tortured, raped, and murdered 33 young men.
18:01Most victims of child abuse do not become serial killers.
18:05However, evidence shows that this can help create a killer.
18:13Most people think that serial killers are all white men.
18:17But that's wrong.
18:19Take a look at serial killer Irene Werners.
18:24She struggled to make ends meet as a roadside prostitute in Florida.
18:29In 1989, people began finding male corpses in the bushes alongside highways.
18:36They also found abandoned cars, stained with blood.
18:40Sometimes, on the other side of the state.
18:43Bullets from a .22 caliber weapon killed all seven victims.
18:50But, like all killers, she left clues.
18:54The forensic analyst examined the driver's side armrest and removed it.
18:59Upon removing the support, he noticed something that appeared to be a bloody handprint.
19:06The fingerprints on the cars matched those obtained from the National Criminal Information Data Center.
19:12Werners already had a long criminal record for prostitution and robbery.
19:18She claimed she shot the men in self-defense after they tried to rape her.
19:23But the pattern of systematic killing was too clear for the jurors to ignore.
19:28Upon receiving her sentence, she revealed the depth of her hatred.
19:33It makes no sense to keep me alive because I would kill again.
19:38I have so much anger, so much hatred inside me against this world.
19:45In October 2002, a lethal injection killed Aileen Werners.
19:50But could it be that your destiny was decided in the very first moments of your life?
19:55Psychologist Adrian Reigns studied the minds of murderers.
19:59There is certainly a cerebral basis for criminal and violent behavior.
20:04The brains of psychopathic and violent individuals are very different from ours.
20:09It's different in terms of how it works and even physically.
20:15Neuroimaging has shown that violent criminals have 11% fewer brain cells in their prefrontal cortex.
20:23This is the part of the brain responsible for empathy, sense of humor, and personality.
20:28Significant damage to the prefrontal cortex could create a person who would torture and kill without restraint.
20:38Numerous serial killers have a history of brain injury.
20:43Aileen Werners may have suffered a brain injury during her breech presentation.
20:47And as a teenager, Arthur Shawcross suffered severe head injuries.
20:52When I was 18, I was hit here with a sledgehammer.
20:57This brand resulted from a discussion at school.
21:02But Shawcross also had an extra Y chromosome.
21:06Something more commonly found in violent criminals than in the general population.
21:12Doctors have also noted that some serial killers have low resting heart rates and low levels of alertness.
21:19These disorders can fuel a need for extreme stimulation.
21:22They seek excitement due to their low level of alertness, as well as the fact that they lack awareness and remorse.
21:33If there is a biological component to serial killings, could these killers be cured?
21:39The authorities administered drugs to certain types of convicts.
21:45In 1996, California became the first state to pass a chemical castration law.
21:50Repeat child molesters had to take a drug to suppress their sexual urges.
21:56Tepo Provera is a contraceptive, but in men it lowers testosterone levels, equivalent to those of a pre-teen boy.
22:03-adolescent.
22:06This type of treatment could also work on serial killers.
22:12More precise neuroimaging can identify future violent offenders.
22:18There will come a point where we can say, right at the beginning of a child's life,
22:25She has an 80% chance of becoming a violent criminal when she grows up.
22:33Being accused of future crimes that one may never commit sounds like science fiction, but also like an ethical mental field.
22:40What do we do as a society, and when are they born?
22:44Do we discard them or do we take care to prevent them from being born?
22:50The time spent tracking down the killers involves local police.
22:54Police officers in the area knock on doors and ask questions.
22:58But serial killers often move around.
23:02The crime scenes of a hitman can be spread across hundreds of kilometers.
23:07Now, technology is helping law enforcement find links between unsolved homicides across America.
23:14The FBI's violent criminal arrest program, called PICAP in English,
23:19It is a national database that searches for similarities between seemingly unrelated deaths.
23:24The program observes the behavioral characteristics of violent crimes.
23:29The instruments, the tools used to commit the attack, where the victim encountered the suspect,
23:34Where she was last seen, the position of the body when it was found.
23:40The idea for the program dates back to 1956 in Los Angeles.
23:45Three women were killed after posing suggestively for crime magazine covers.
23:50Detective Pierce Brooks arrested a dishonest photographer named Harvey Gletman.
23:57Brooks had caught the culprit, but decided not to close the case.
24:01He was convinced that Harvey Gletman had committed crimes in other locations in the United States.
24:06And the law was unaware of these facts.
24:09He went to the library and searched the newspapers for other crimes committed by Harvey Gletman.
24:17Brooks asked the police department to assemble a computer that would cross-reference information about crimes that had occurred throughout the country.
24:23the country.
24:24And at that time the boss simply laughed at him, saying that it involved a million dollars per computer.
24:30and they would need an entire city block.
24:33They had neither money nor space.
24:36But times and technology have changed.
24:39His idea involving a central crime computer came to fruition in the early 1980s.
24:45It evolved from a list containing basic details of the crime scene.
24:48provided by a local police department to a sort of encyclopedia of not-so-obvious clues.
24:54Even serial killer Ted Bundy advised the FBI on how to improve the system.
24:59He looked at the Vice-Captain's form and gave us some suggestions that were incorporated.
25:04improving this form.
25:08It is also extremely important to have the perspective of the criminal.
25:12One of his greatest successes was when he helped to capture the railroad killer.
25:20In 1999, Vice-Cap investigators found connections between nine murders that occurred in three states.
25:27All the attacks occurred near railroad tracks.
25:30The local police in each region had no idea about the other unsolved crimes.
25:35until the Vice-Captain corrected this communication flaw.
25:39With the different jurisdictions now in dialogue, they discovered more similarities.
25:44In each case, the perpetrator struck the victim with an object found at the crime scene.
25:51The killer also raped women and stole small valuables.
25:56But most importantly, it was fingerprints that linked one man to three of the crimes.
26:03When we saw the similarity, we realized that we had cases in Texas and cases in Kentucky.
26:10He was a railway passenger and, obviously, he was crossing the country.
26:14So, we started looking.
26:18More than 200 agents went after the railroad killer.
26:22The investigation made headlines, and more clues began to emerge.
26:28Authorities focused their investigation on Angel Recendiz, an illegal immigrant from Mexico.
26:32with a long history of crimes committed on both sides of the border.
26:38The FBI put him on their list of ten most wanted criminals.
26:42He was also linked to another 200 crimes in Mexico.
26:46Recendiz's family convinced him to confess and turn himself in to US authorities.
26:53It is unknown how many people he killed.
26:55But, thanks to Vice-Cap, the killing ended.
26:59A Texas court sentenced him to death by lethal injection.
27:05The law doesn't always need technology to catch murderers.
27:09The more they kill, the greater the chances of making mistakes.
27:14One of the reasons these killers are caught is what I call the ambition factor.
27:20They feel comfortable with what they do and think the police are idiots, that they will never be caught.
27:25They continue committing crimes when, in fact, the police have already focused on them.
27:30And they commit another crime.
27:34There isn't always a classic flaw in the crime scene that leads the police to the serial killer.
27:39Sometimes it's something as mundane as a traffic violation.
27:43Sam's son, David Berkowitz, the hitman who terrorized New Yorkers in the late 1970s,
27:49He killed six people before a traffic ticket led to his arrest.
27:52On July 31, 1977, he parked his car in front of Indrante,
27:58before shooting Stacy Moscovitz and Bob Violante in the head.
28:03Upon returning to his car, he tore up the ticket and remained stopped long enough.
28:07so that a witness can give a detailed description.
28:11Even one of the most cunning serial killers, Ted Bundy, was arrested by an attentive street cop.
28:17The patrolman saw Bundy driving his favorite car, a stolen Volkswagen.
28:22He chose those cars because he could remove the passenger seat.
28:26and to have more space to kidnap and overpower the victims.
28:29A police officer in Pensacola, Florida, saw the license plate of the stolen car.
28:32And so began Bundy's irreversible journey to the electric chair.
28:38Other serial killers have made even more foolish mistakes.
28:42The machete killer, Juan Corona, could get away with murder 25 years ago.
28:47But he left receipts with his signature at some of the graves.
28:52British killer Dennis Nilsson owes his imprisonment to his cruel disposal methods.
28:58He killed 12 boys, dismembered the bodies, and tried to use the toilet to dispose of some of the organs.
29:04And that clogged the plumbing throughout the entire building.
29:07The plumber alerted the police when he found body parts in the sewer, and Nilsson was immediately arrested.
29:13The assassin Dennis Rader took the art of getting arrested to a whole new level.
29:18He took at least 10 lives in Wichita, Kansas, between 1974 and 1991.
29:25He would tie up, torture, and kill his victims.
29:28After the media lost interest, he dropped clues about his identity in a series of letters to local stations.
29:34TV.
29:35But vanity was his downfall.
29:37He provided so many clues to the authorities that they solved the mystery in 2005.
29:45If you thought one serial killer was bad, how about a whole group of them?
29:52A notorious series of murders began in 1983 at Lenz General Hospital in Vienna.
29:58It all started when an elderly patient asked Waltraud Wagner, a 23-year-old nursing assistant, to put an end to her illness.
30:05to your suffering.
30:06She answered the phone and gave the sick woman an overdose of morphine.
30:10The feeling of power must have attracted her.
30:12But not only her.
30:13Shortly after, three other nurses from the night shift joined her.
30:17There had been cases of murders at the hospital before, but this case involved four people who knew each other.
30:25They soon moved from sporadic mercy killings by lethal injection to the immediate murder of patients.
30:32Supposedly those who caused the most trouble.
30:36One of the team's preferred methods was the supposed cure through water.
30:41The nurses were forcing water into the patient's lungs.
30:45The painful death could be attributed to a natural cause of fluid in the lungs.
30:53After six years, these women had killed at least 49 patients.
30:58Perhaps they would never have been caught if someone hadn't happened to overheard them laughing and boasting about their crimes.
31:08For the infamous partners in crime Paul Bernardo and Carla Romolka, known as Kenny and the Barbie of serial killers,
31:14Love acted in deadly ways.
31:17They met at a nightclub in Toronto in 1987.
31:20He was 23 and she was 17.
31:24They started dating.
31:25Three years later, his version of a romantic escapade involved the kidnapping, rape, and murder of his 15-year-old sister.
31:32by Carla.
31:34They recorded the crimes on video.
31:37In one scene, they posed well-dressed for the camera before raping a teenage girl.
31:43They got married in an extravagant ceremony on June 29, 1991.
31:48On the same day, the dismembered body of one of the victims was found encased in concrete in a labia.
31:55But there was no happy ending for those two.
31:58In early 1993, Bernardo beat his wife so badly that she had to be hospitalized and turned against him.
32:06In exchange for a full confession, the Canadian government reduced his sentence to 12 years.
32:13She was released in 2005 and now lives without restrictions in the province of Quebec.
32:20Bernardo, who admitted to raping and killing at least 25 girls, remains in prison.
32:30Most people feel repulsed by serial killers and their crimes.
32:35But some women are attracted to them and even fall in love.
32:52Veronica Campton said she wanted to interview the Hill Strangler, Kenneth Bianchi, for a play she was writing about a murderer.
32:59serial of women.
33:00She visited him in prison and soon fell in love.
33:04Campton agreed to commit a similar murder.
33:07They hoped the authorities would think the real culprit was still at large and release Bianchi.
33:13She managed to lure a woman to a motel, but her would-be victim overpowered her and called the police.
33:19Given this failure and the fact that she also ended up in prison, Bianchi's interest in Campton waned.
33:26Then she fell in love with Ted Bundy and the Sunset Strip killer, Doug Clark.
33:31Clark even sent her a card with a headless woman's body on it.
33:36In the case of the handsome Ted Bundy, she wasn't the only one to get involved.
33:42The college student killer received hundreds of letters from admirers.
33:46The women went to his trial dressed as his victims, even copying their hairstyles.
33:53You try to put yourself in his place and imagine how he feels looking at the stained pillow.
33:59blood, whether he actually did it or not.
34:02Carol Ann Bundy met Bundy in Washington state and later followed him to Florida for his trial.
34:08In 1980, taking advantage of a Florida law that stated that marriage declarations made in court had
34:14Legally, they got married.
34:16Everything happened during the pronouncement of the sentence.
34:18Carol, will you marry me?
34:21Yes.
34:21Then I'll marry you.
34:23Yes.
34:24No one knows how, but that year she conceived a child with the murderer.
34:34There was also fierce competition for the affections of the night tracker, Richard Ramirez.
34:40So ferocious that despite his convictions in 43 counties, including 13 gruesome murders and 11 sexual assaults, he soon...
34:48He became known as the Romeo of Death Row.
34:51Some like the idea of a serial killer because he is an alpha male.
34:56Some want to become her confidantes.
34:59Others reflect trauma caused by an abusive and violent father.
35:05Of all the women who visited him and wrote letters, including a juror who voted for the death penalty, she was...
35:11Doreen Leoy, a freelance magazine editor, came out on top.
35:15In 1998, Ramirez proposed to her.
35:19Eight years later, in the main visiting room of San Quentin prison in California, the ceremony took place and she
35:25She finally fulfilled her dream of becoming Mrs. Richard Ramirez.
35:28I want to say that I am very happy to have married Richard and very happy to be
35:35His wife.
35:39If someone asked you to name the most famous serial killer of all time, it's likely that your mind would...
35:45traveled to the foggy streets of 19th-century London.
35:50Nobody knows this man's real name, but everyone knows his nickname.
35:57Jack the Ripper.
36:00His crimes horrified society and caused a media frenzy.
36:05Jack the Ripper killed at least five prostitutes on the streets of London's Sordid East End.
36:11He was never caught.
36:14More than a century later, researchers are still struggling to identify it.
36:19And mainly because of the locations where he committed four of the five crimes.
36:24They were outdoor locations.
36:25They were in the streets or in a backyard.
36:27A high-risk crime.
36:29In other words, whoever it was, was almost oblivious to the risk.
36:36Minutes after killing his third victim, he dismembered the fourth in a public square that was patrolled by the police every fifteen days.
36:43minutes.
36:45Today, FBI investigators would fawn over Jack the Ripper as a disorganized killer.
36:51He was unpredictable, perhaps even psychotic.
36:54He wasn't trying to hide the evidence, mutilating the bodies in a frenzy.
36:59He also liked to boast in letters sent to the police and the media.
37:03It was in these letters that the murderer gave himself the famous nickname.
37:10One of them, the famous Letter from Hell, contained a piece of human kidney.
37:16The media of the 19th century had never seen anything like it.
37:20Newspapers around the world, approximately 300 newspapers, covered Jack the Ripper.
37:26The Ripper case remains the greatest criminal mystery in history.
37:31The suspects include everyone from members of the royal family to Madil, the Ripper.
37:37I don't believe anyone will ever know who Jack the Ripper was.
37:42Even if evidence emerges giving us a good indication of who it was,
37:46Most people don't want the mystery solved.
37:51If they couldn't prove anything 111 years ago, they're not going to prove it now.
37:56This doesn't deter tourists who pay up to $53 to retrace their steps through London's East End.
38:02But Jack the Ripper is not the only one who escaped unpunished for these murders.
38:07According to FBI estimates, there are between 35 and 50 serial killers at large in the United States today.
38:14The Zodiac Killer terrorized San Francisco in the late 1960s.
38:19The killer shot people sitting in parked cars.
38:23His letters and phone calls to the police and local media warned people to protect their sisters, daughters, and wives.
38:29away from the streets.
38:31In 1970, after killing 49 people, the Zodiac stopped flying.
38:35But he was never caught.
38:39A huge number of murders had plagued Juarez, Mexico, since 1993.
38:45Around 400 women were found dead or reported missing.
38:50Investigators discovered violated and strangled bodies dumped in the desert.
38:55Some had been lying there for years.
38:57Local police have arrested more than a dozen suspects over the years, always hoping that this would put an end to the killing.
39:04But the death toll continued to rise.
39:07The Interstate 45 killer has been hunting victims throughout the American Southwest since 1971.
39:14At least 32 people were last seen alive on that stretch of Texas highway between Houston and Galveston.
39:21The girls, generally short, slender, and dark-haired, simply disappeared into the night.
39:26The last murder occurred in 1999.
39:30But police believe the killer may strike again.
39:33The good news is that there are many more serial killers still at large around the world.
39:39There are countries that don't even entertain the possibility of having a serial killer.
39:44So it's very difficult to know how many serial killers are out there.
39:48They are very good.
39:50They lie and you believe everything they say.
39:53They are charlatans and cunning.
39:55And they are living among us.
39:59Serious killers.
40:01Here are some facts about them to impress fans of the genre.
40:05If you think it's easy to identify a serial killer, remember that Ted Bundy worked on a political campaign.
40:12John Wayne Gacy worked as a clown at children's parties, and Dennis Reuter was a Boy Scout leader.
40:18It is said that the most prolific serial killer in history was a 16th-century Hungarian countess who drank and...
40:24He was bathing in the blood of his victims.
40:28You are more likely to be struck by lightning twice than to be killed by a serial killer.
40:33And finally, in the future, authorities may be able to identify serial killers before they commit a crime, thanks to advanced technology.
40:42from neuroimaging.
40:47Brazilian version, DPN Santos.
41:07Transcription and Subtitles by Pedro Negri
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