Dennis Rader The BTK Serial Killer

Dennis Rader is a serial killer who is best known as the BTK, Bind, Torture and Kill who would be convicted of ten murders however is suspected of more

According to court documents Dennis Rader would break into a home where he would murder Joseph Otero Sr., 38; Julia Maria “Julie” Otero, 33; Joseph “Joey” Otero II, 9; and Josephine “Josie” Otero, 11 in 1974

Later that same year Dennis Rader would murder Kathryn Doreen Bright, 21, and attempted to murder her brother who was able to escape

In 1977 Dennis Rader would murder Shirley Ruth Vian Relford inside of her home. BTK had tied up her three children but thankfully they escaped unharmed

Later that same year Dennis Rader would murder Nancy Jo Fox after stalking the woman for some time

It was not until 1985 that Dennis Rader would kill again and this time his victim was Marine Wallace Hedge

A year later Dennis Rader would murder Vicki Lynn Wegerle inside of her home.

The last confirmed victim was Dolores Earline “Dee” Davis who was murdered in 1995

Dennis Rader Capture And Conviction

Dennis Rader was finally arrested in 2005 and would be charged with ten counts of first degree murder. Rader would eventually plead guilty to all ten murders however he would offer no explanation to the motive behind the ten murders

Dennis Rader would be sentenced to ten consecutive life sentences with a minimum of 175 years

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Current Location (2) El Dorado CF-Central

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Dennis Rader Case

Dennis Rader, (born March 9, 1945, Pittsburg, Kansas, U.S.), American serial killer who murdered 10 people over a span of three decades before his arrest and confession in 2005. He called himself BTK because he bound, tortured, and killed his victims.

Rader was raised in Wichita, Kansas. He later claimed that as a youth he had killed animals and developed violent sexual fantasies that involved bondage. In the 1960s he served in the U.S. Air Force, and in 1970 he returned to Wichita, where he married and had two children. He held various jobs, including a brief stint as a factory worker for the Coleman Company, a maker of camping equipment. In 1979 he graduated from Wichita State University, where he studied criminal justice. During this time he began working for ADT, a home-security company, and in 1991 he became a compliance officer in Park City, Kansas. Rader was active in his church, and he served as a Boy Scout leader.

On January 15, 1974, Rader committed his first murders, strangling four family members, including two children, in their Wichita home; the mother had worked for Coleman. Semen was found at the scene, though none of the victims had been sexually assaulted. Rader took a watch from the home, and he would acquire souvenirs—often underwear—from subsequent victims. In April 1974 Rader targeted a 21-year-old woman who was another Coleman employee. After breaking into her house, however, he also encountered her brother, who managed to escape despite being shot. Rader fatally stabbed the woman before fleeing. Later that year he wrote a letter detailing the January murders and saying that “the code words for me will be…bind them, torture them, kill them, B.T.K.” He left the note in a book at the Wichita Public Library, and it was eventually recovered by the police.

Over the next two decades, Rader killed five more women. His sixth victim was strangled in March 1977 after he locked her three young children in the bathroom. Following the death of his next victim in December 1977, Rader grew irritated by the lack of media coverage. In a letter to a local TV station he wrote, “How many people do I have to kill before I get a name in the paper or some national attention.” The resulting coverage helped set off a panic. Rader then waited eight years before murdering a neighbour in her home in 1985; he reportedly later took her body to his church, where he photographed her in bondage. A 28-year-old mother of two was killed in 1986, and in 1991 Rader committed his last murder, strangling a 62-year-old woman in her secluded home. The cases subsequently went cold.

In 2004, on the 30th anniversary of Rader’s first murders, a local paper ran a feature in which it speculated that the killer had either died or been imprisoned. Rader responded by sending various evidence from his ninth murder—notably a copy of the victim’s driver’s license as well as photographs of her body—to a reporter. For the next year, he sent packages to the media or simply left items around Wichita. He often used cereal boxes—possibly a reference to “serial killer”—to hold drawings; crime souvenirs, including photographs; written descriptions of the murders; and even dolls posed to mimic the various deaths.

In January 2005 police received a break after recovering a cereal box that included a note in which Rader asked police whether they would be able to trace a floppy disk he wanted to send them. Through a classified ad, law enforcement officials indicated that it would be safe. He then sent them a disk, which the police quickly traced to his church, where he served as president of the congregation. Rader’s DNA was then matched to the semen found at the first crime scene. He was arrested in February 2005, and he soon confessed to the crimes—and expressed shock that the police had lied to him. In June Rader pled guilty, and two months later he was sentenced to 10 consecutive life terms.

https://www.britannica.com/biography/Dennis-Rader

John Stumpf Murders Mary Jane Stoudt In Ohio

John Stumpf was sentenced to death by the State of Ohio for the murder of Mary Jane Stoudt during a robbery

According to court documents John Stumpf would force his way into a home where he would fatally shoot Mary Jane Stoudt and injure her husband during the robbery attempt in 1984

John Stumpf would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to death

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Number A181258

DOB 09/16/1960

Gender Male Race White

Admission Date 09/28/1984

Institution Chillicothe Correctional Institution

Status INCARCERATED

John Stumpf Case

Thirty-six years after taking the life of Mary Jane Stoudt during a botched robbery attempt at her New Concord area home, John David Stumpf, 59, lives on Ohio’s death row.

And now, he will live on for at least another year.

Twice scheduled to die in 2018 and later this year, Stumpf once again received a reprieve on his death sentence Friday while Ohio continues to search for an adequate supply of drugs for lethal injections. Stumpf’s new execution date is Sept. 15, 2021, according to the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.

When asked what it was going to take to finally get justice for his late wife, Norman Stoudt, who was also shot by Stumpf and left for dead, believes it’s as simple as following the law.

“The judges and lawyers are bound to uphold the law, and the law is if you kill someone, you pay for it,” Stoudt said. “It’s going to take the justice division taking responsibility and getting it out of the hands of the politicians to execute these people. It has been 36 years and millions of tax payer dollars to keep this piece of crap (in prison).”

Stoudt, who turns 90 in a few months, has vowed to stay alive to see his wife’s killer executed.

“They have just about succeeded in keeping him alive longer than me,” Stoudt said. “Her parents and parents-in-law have all died without seeing any justice. Her older brother with whom she was close, also died without seeing justice. A lot of things need to change.”

The Associated Press reported Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine delayed three executions including Stumpf’s April 16 date on Friday due to the state’s inability to obtain lethal injection drugs from pharmaceutical companies.

The warrants of reprieve by DeWine also delayed the execution of Gregory Lott until May 27, 2021, and Warren “Keith” Henness until Jan. 12, 2022. Lott and Henness were previously scheduled to die this year in March and May, respectively.

The AP reported DeWine has said for months that he is concerned that drug companies — which oppose the use of their drugs in executions — could pull pharmaceuticals from state hospitals to punish Ohio if the state secures their drugs and uses them for lethal injections.

The Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction previously rescheduled Stumpf’s execution date to this year following challenges to the state’s three-drug method.

Stumpf was scheduled to die on Nov. 14, 2018, for shooting and killing Stoudt on May 14, 1984. That execution date had been rescheduled from Jan. 3, 2018, due to the then challenges to the lethal injection process.

The death sentence for Stumpf was handed down by a three-judge panel during a hearing on Sept. 24, 1984, in the Guernsey County Common Pleas Court.

Stumpf shot Stoudt during the botched robbery attempt at the home she shared with her husband, Norman, who was also shot by Stumpf. Mary Jane was shot three times and died at the home while Norman survived.

The three-judge panel also convicted Stumpf of attempted aggravated murder for shooting Norman Stoudt.

In rendering its decision to sentence him to death, the three-judge panel stated the only reason Stumpf shot the Stoudts was to avoid arrest. John Stumpf later disputed his role in the slaying, and his attorneys fought the conviction throughout the 1980s and 1990s.

In 2004, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals vacated Stump’s conviction and death sentence based on an involuntary guilty plea and inconsistent prosecution theories. But, the U.S. Supreme Court later reversed the decision by the circuit court.

In 2013, the circuit court denied an appeal that would have repealed the death sentence, and the execution order for Stumpf was initially issued for January 2018.

John Stumpf is one of the longest serving inmates on Ohio’s death row at the Chillicothe Correctional Institution.

The ODRC website lists six inmates who still have execution dates scheduled in 2020.

As for John Stumpf’s co-defendants from that fateful May day in 1984, Clyde D. Wesley, 60, is serving a 35-years-to-life sentence at the Marion Correctional Institution; and Norman Edmonds, the alleged getaway driver, served approximately 10 years before his release.

John Stumpf has maintained Wesley shot Mary Jane Stoudt, but acknowledged he shot Norman Stoudt. Wesley was convicted of aggravated murder, attempted aggravated murder, aggravated robbery and two counts of petty theft.

The next parole hearing for Wesley is scheduled for February 2027.

Other local killers on Ohio’s death row include Marvin Johnson, 53, of Guernsey County, and Frederick A. Mundt, 45, of Noble County. Johnson arrived on death row on June 4, 2004, while Mundt arrived that same year on Dec. 17.

https://www.daily-jeff.com/story/news/crime/2020/02/04/john-stumpf-execution-date-delayed/1773569007/

Jeremy Webster Murders Vaughn Bigelow

Jeremy Webster is a killer from Colorado who was convicted of the murder of thirteen year old Vaughn Bigelow

According to court documents Jeremy Webster was driving in Denver Colorado when he believed that he was cut off by Vaughn Bigelow mother Meghan Vaughn when in reality Meghan had moved over to let an emergency vehicle pass.

Jeremy Webster would follow Meghan Vaughn into a parking lot where he would get out of his vehicle and opened fire, striking and killing thirteen year old Vaughn Bigelow and injuring Meghan as well as her seven year old child

Jeremy Webster would be arrested, convicted and sentenced to life in prison

Jeremy Webster Videos

Jeremy Webster Case

Jeremy Webster, a man accused of opening fire on a family and killing a 13-year-old boy in June 2018 was found guilty on all charges and sentenced to life without parole Wednesday.

Vaughn Bigelow Jr., 13, was killed in the shooting as a result of a gunshot wound to his head.

Webster, 27, was found guilty of 12 charges in all — murder, multiple counts of attempted murder, multiple counts of assault and attempted assault. He was given the maximum sentence for all charges.

Before handing out the sentence, the judge said this case was “unlike any other case” because of the level of tragedy and loss.

District Attorney Brian Mason echoed this after the sentencing and called the loss to the Bigelow family unspeakable.

“I’ve seen a lot of bad cases in my career, and this is one of the worst we have ever, ever seen,” he said.

Before Webster was sentenced, Vaughn’s mother, Meghan, asked the judge to give him the maximum sentence.

“The impact of what happened can’t be fully put into words,” she said.

Meghan also took the stand on the first day of trial and said the incident started when she was driving her three boys to the dentist’s office.

She testified when she tried to move into another lane of traffic to allow an emergency vehicle to pass that Webster became enraged that she had cut him off.

Meghan told the jury that he screamed obscenities at her and followed her into the dentist’s parking lot.

In the parking lot, Meghan said Webster pulled out a gun and shot at her and the children.

“I yelled to the boys he’s got a gun, run,” she testified.

Meghan was shot and injured during the attack, along with Vaughn’s brother, Asa, who was 7 at the time. He suffered from a brain injury and hearing loss in his right ear, among other injuries.

The long-delayed trial concluded after final statements Wednesday. It had started two weeks prior.

https://kdvr.com/news/local/man-guilty-of-murder-in-deadly-road-rage-shooting-that-killed-13-year-old/

Jeremy Webster News

It took a jury only a few hours to find Jeremy Webster guilty of murder and attempted murder for the 2018 road rage shooting that killed 13-year-old Vaughn Bigelow and injured others.

Webster, 27, was convicted Wednesday in a deadly road rage incident that ended with him shooting down a family outside of a dentist’s office, killing a 13-year-old boy.

Webster was 23 years old when he was arrested. The shooting occurred back in 2018.

Webster pleaded not guilty to murder and attempted murder in the case.

In addition to allegedly killing 13-year-old Vaughn Bigelow, Webster was convicted of injuring the teen’s mother Meghan Bigelow and younger brother at the time.

He allegedly confessed to police that he was struggling with mental health issues after he was arrested.

“Mr. Webster is using insanity as an excuse for the cold-blooded murder of a 13-year-old child for his attempt to kill everyone else on scene. He knew exactly what he was doing and he should be held accountable and be found guilty on all counts which he is charged,” the prosecution said during closing arguments in court.

Webster pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. His lawyers say he suffers from schizoaffective bipolar disorder. But the prosecution said the crime was intentional and deliberate.

“He had a mood disorder that began at a very young age and it progressed, as it does, and eventually he reaches his 20s and he has schizoaffective bipolar disorder,” Webster’s defense attorney said.

He was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for first-degree murder. As well as 48 years each for 6 counts of attempted murder and 32 years for 4 counts of assault. He was also convicted of attempted assault.

In a victim impact statement, Megan Bigelow said the impact of the crime on her family cannot be put into words. She said the verdict does not bring back her son Vaughn and that her surviving son Asa still deals with health impacts from the shooting.

https://www.cbsnews.com/colorado/news/jeremy-webster-receives-guilty-verdict-murder-trial/

Jung Yoo-jung Murders Stranger In Korea

Jung Yoo-jung is a killer from Korea who would be convicted of the murder of a stranger out of curiosity

According to court documents Jung Yoo-jung was obsessed with true crime and soon began playing with the idea of killing someone to see what it would feel like.

Jung Yoo-jung would pose as a parent as part of her ruse in order to hire a tutor. When the tutor arrived the victim would be stabbed to death. The victim’s identity has not been made public by the Korean police

It was later revealed that Jung Yoo-jung had contacted over fifty potential victims in the months leading up to the murder

Jung Yoo-jung would be arrested, plead guilty to murder and was sentenced to life in prison

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Jung Yoo-jung Case

A South Korean court has given a life sentence to a true crime fan who told police she murdered a stranger “out of curiosity”.

Jung Yoo-jung, 23, had been obsessed with crime shows and novels and scored highly on psychopath tests, police said.

Fixated with the idea of “trying out a murder”, she used an app to meet an English-language teacher, stabbing her to death at her home in May.

The brutal killing shocked South Korea.

Prosecutors had asked for the death penalty – a request typically reserved for the gravest of offences.

They told the court that Jung, an unemployed loner who lived with her grandfather, had looked for victims for months, using an online tutoring app to find a target.

She contacted more than 50 people and favoured women, asking them if they conducted their lessons at home.

In May, posing as the mother of a high school student who needed English lessons, she contacted the 26-year-old victim, who lived in the south-eastern city of Busan. Her identity has not been disclosed by police.

Jung then showed up at the tutor’s house dressed in a school uniform she had bought online, prosecutors said.

After the teacher let her in, she attacked the woman, stabbing her more than 100 times – continuing the frenzied attack even after the victim had died.

She then dismembered the woman’s body and took a taxi ride to dump some of the remains in remote parkland near a river, north of Busan.

She was arrested after the taxi driver tipped off police about a customer who had dumped a blood-soaked suitcase in the woods.

Police said Jung’s online browsing history showed she had researched for months on how to kill, and how to get rid of a body.

But she was also careless, police said, and took no effort to avoid CCTV cameras, which captured her entering and leaving the tutor’s home several times.

On Friday, a sentencing judge in the Busan District Court said the killing had “spread fear in society that one can become a victim for no reason” and “incited a general distrust” among the community.

Jung, who confessed to the crime in June, pleaded for a more lenient sentence, saying she had suffered hallucinations and other mental disorders at the time.

But the court rejected her argument as the crime had been “carefully planned and carried out, and it is difficult to accept her claim of mental and physical disorder”.

They noted that her statements to police had frequently changed. Initially Jung said she had only moved the body after someone else killed the woman, then later claimed that the killing had occurred as a result of an argument.

In the end, she confessed that her interest in committing a murder had been piqued by crime shows and TV programmes.

While South Korea retains the death penalty, it has not carried out an execution since 1997.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-67517532

Alan Hruby Murders Family In Oklahoma

Alan Hruby was a nineteen year old teen killer from Oklahoma who was convicted of the murders of his father, mother and younger sister

According to court documents Alan Hruby was a student at the University Of Oklahoma and was addicted to spending money. His family would cut him off financially in the hopes it would cure his spending. Instead Alan Hruby would plan their murders in order to get his hands on the inheritence

Alan Hruby would go to the family home where he would fatally shoot John Hruby, 50, Joy “Tinker” Hruby, 48, and his sister, Katherine Hruby, 17, before staging the scene to look a robbery gone bad

Alan Hruby would be arrested, make a full confession to police, was convicted and sentenced to three life sentences without parole

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Gender: Male

Race: White

Height: 5 ft 8 in

Weight: 125 lbs

Hair Color: Brown

Eye Color: Hazel



OK DOC#: 688134

Birth Date: 5/8/1995


Current Facility: R.B. DICK CONNER CORRECTIONAL CENTER, HOMIN

Reception Date: 3/15/2016

Alan Hruby Case

Admitted murderer Alan Joseph Hruby wept and trembled Thursday as he was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for fatally shooting his parents and younger sister.

Hruby, 20, pleaded guilty Thursday to three counts of first-degree murder after prosecutors dropped their request for the death penalty.

Defense attorneys had sought a plea deal all along for no-parole life sentences. Stephens County District Attorney Jason Hicks agreed — after relatives of Hruby’s mother asked him to so they could have closure.

“The way it is at present, just about the time we get to a position where [our] lives are beginning to regain some semblance of order, something comes up and we start the process over again,” the relatives told the district attorney in a Feb. 25 letter. “We need this to end.”

The jury trial had been scheduled to begin April 18.

After the sentencing, Hicks asked the public to respect the family’s decision. The district attorney said a trial would have lasted at least three weeks and appeals would have lasted 10 to 15 years.

“I have championed victims’ rights since I was sworn into office a little over five years ago. And I’m not going to allow my opinion and my feelings to stand in the way and put a family through something like that when that is not what they want,” Hicks said at a news conference.

Under the plea agreement, Hruby was sentenced to three consecutive life terms in prison without the possibility of parole. He, in turn, agreed not to appeal, not to contact his relatives, not to profit from his crimes through book or movie deals and not to communicate with the media.

Killed were John Hruby, 50, Joy “Tinker” Hruby, 48, and their daughter, Katherine Hruby, 17.

Prosecutors alleged Hruby murdered them on Oct. 9, 2014, in their Duncan home for his inheritance. Hruby is an admitted shopaholic, and his parents had cut off his money. Hruby was then a freshman at the University of Oklahoma.

Prosecutors alleged he staged the crime scene to make the killings look like the act of a robber.

The longtime housekeeper found their bodies in the kitchen on Oct. 13, 2014. Hruby confessed to police the next day, saying he shot his mother first, then his sister when she came in from washing her vehicle and then his father after waiting for an hour.

The deaths attracted widespread attention nationally and across the state. John Hruby and his wife were especially well-known in state media circles because he was publisher of The Marlow Review, a weekly newspaper.

Their son described the shootings again Thursday, speaking in court in a low voice. He did not apologize during his remarks.

He admitted in court to using a pistol he had stolen from his father’s vehicle. He said he traveled after the shootings to Dallas, where OU was playing its annual football game against the University of Texas.

He stayed at The Ritz-Carlton in Dallas with friends, but did not attend the game, police and witnesses have said.

Hruby shook repeatedly Thursday as he stood in chains and orange jail clothes before District Judge Ken Graham. Relatives of his mother watched a few feet away from the jury box.

The judge accepted the plea deal after hearing that both relatives of Joy Hruby and the sister of John Hruby had agreed to it.

“We feel we can close this chapter and get on with our lives as best we can,” Joy Hruby’s father, Richard Stein Jr., said to the judge.

Stein then looked at Alan Hruby and said, “My only comment to the boy is: ‘May God have mercy on your soul.

Prosecutors read a letter and statement from John Hruby’s sister, Alison Hruby Whittaker, who decided not to attend.

“I have known the killer since he was born and spent many holidays and vacation time as family over the years,” she wrote. “The killer was part of our family, but no more. He has destroyed that family by his evil and insidious acts. … If there were ever a definition of evil, it would be the killer who took our family. I want him never to hurt another soul or to ever see him again.”

In a letter last year to The Oklahoman, Hruby indicated he wanted to be executed. He wrote in the letter that he welcomes the death penalty 100 percent for his unspeakable acts.

Despite his statement, his attorneys never took steps to resolve the case through a death sentence.

He also wrote in the letter to the newspaper that he was still trying to work out why he did what he did.

“This didn’t happen because of shopping. My shopping wasn’t something I or my parents could not pay. They just thought my spending was out of control, and it was,” he wrote. “I didn’t feel like myself that day.”

Alan Hruby appeared gaunt Thursday, looking much thinner than his previous court dates.

Before the shootings, Hruby had described himself online as a shopaholic of many years. He wrote in a blog that “there is no bigger rush” than swiping your credit card at a store register.

Alan Hruby was on probation at the time of the shootings for taking out a credit card in his grandmother’s name without her permission in 2013. He fraudulently used the card, mostly in Paris while on vacation, court records show. A judge revoked his probation after the shootings and sent him to prison for the credit card offense.

https://www.oklahoman.com/story/news/columns/2016/03/10/triple-murder-defendant-pleads-guilty-gets-life-in-prison/60687297007/