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Serial Killer for 07/05/07

Mentalist

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Staff member
ED GEIN


geinheadshot427f579mc9.jpg



Edward Theodore Gein (August 27, 1906 – July 26, 1984), was an American serial killer. Though only two murders on his part were proved, he gained great infamy due to necrophiliac behavior (which involved the skinning of his murder victims and exhumed corpses, the decoration of his home with parts of corpses, and the creation of articles of clothing and furniture from the skin of corpses). Besides the death of his brother in 1944 under mysterious circumstances, six people disappeared from the Wisconsin towns of La Crosse and Plainfield between 1947 and 1957.



Childhood

Ed Gein was born to Augusta Lehrke (1878–1945) and George P. Gein (1873–1940) on August 28, 1906, in La Crosse, Wisconsin.[1] His parents, both natives of Wisconsin, had married on July 7, 1900, and their marriage produced Ed and his older brother, Henry G. Gein (1901 – 1944). George Gein was a violent alcoholic who was frequently unemployed. Ed and his brother rejected their violent, aimless father, as did Augusta, who treated her husband like a nonentity. Despite her deep contempt for her husband, the atrophic marriage persisted. Divorce was not an option due to the family's religious beliefs. Augusta operated the small family grocery store and eventually purchased a farm on the outskirts of another small town, Plainfield, which became the Gein family's permanent home.

Augusta moved to this desolate location to prevent outsiders from influencing her sons. Gein only left the premises to go to school and Augusta blocked any attempt he made to pursue friendships. Besides school, he spent most of his time doing chores on the farm. Augusta, who was a Lutheran and fanatically religious, drummed into her boys the innate immorality of the world, the evil of drink and the belief that all women (herself excluded) were prostitutes/whores. According to Augusta, the only acceptable form of sex was for biological reproduction/procreation. She reserved time every afternoon to read to them from the bible, usually selecting graphic verses from the Old Testament dealing with death, murder and divine retribution.

When Gein reached puberty, Augusta became increasingly strict, once dousing him in scalding water after she caught him masturbating in the bathtub, grabbing his genitals and calling them the "curse of man".[2]

With a slight growth over one eye and an effeminate demeanor, the young Gein became a target for bullies. Classmates and teachers recall other off-putting mannerisms such as seemingly random laughter, as if he were laughing at his own personal joke. Despite his poor social development, he did fairly well in school, particularly in reading.


Deaths of family members


By the time his father, George, died in 1940, Henry had begun to reject Augusta's view of the world. He had even taken to bad-mouthing her within earshot of his mortified brother. In March 1944, the brothers found themselves in the middle of a brush fire on the farm. When Ed ran to get the police, he told them he had lost sight of Henry, but then led them directly to his brother's corpse. Although there was evidence Henry had suffered blunt trauma to his head, the local county coroner decided he died of asphyxiation while fighting the fire.[2] Gein then lived alone with his mother. Less than two years later, on December 29, 1945, Augusta died from a series of strokes, leaving her grief-stricken son alone on the isolated farmstead.


Arrest

Police suspected Gein to be involved in the disappearance of a store clerk, Bernice Worden, in Plainfield on November 16, 1957. Upon entering a shed on his property, they made their first horrific discovery of the night: Worden's corpse. She had been decapitated, and was hanging upside down by the ankles and had been split open down the torso like a deer. The mutilations had been performed postmortem; she had been shot at close-range with a .22-caliber rifle.

Searching the house, authorities found
  • severed heads acting as bedposts in the bedroom;
  • skin used to make lampshades and upholster chair seats;
  • skulls made into soup bowls;
  • a human heart (it is disputed where the heart was found; the deputies' reports all claim that the heart was in a saucepan on the stove, with some crime scene photographers claiming it was in a paper bag);
  • a face mask made out of real facial skin found in a paper bag;
  • a necklace of human lips;
  • a waistcoat (which he called a "mammary vest") made up of a vagina and breasts stitched together;
  • other items fashioned from the parts of human bodies, including a belt made from nipples.
  • Above all, Gein's most infamous creation was an entire wardrobe fabricated of human skin consisting of leggings, a gutted torso (including breasts) and an array of tanned, dead-skin masks that looked leathery and almost mummified

Gein eventually admitted under questioning that he would dig up the graves of recently buried middle-aged women he thought resembled his mother and take the bodies home, where he tanned their skin to make his macabre possessions. One writer describes Gein's practice of putting on the tanned skins of women as an "insane transvestite ritual".[3] Gein denied having sex with the bodies he exhumed, explaining, "They smelled too bad." During interrogation, Gein also admitted to the shooting death of Mary Hogan, a local tavern employee who had been missing since 1954.

Shortly after his mother's death, Gein decided he wanted a sex change, although it is a matter of some debate whether or not he was transsexual; by most accounts, he created his "woman suit" so he could pretend to be his mother, rather than change his sex.[4]

Harold Schechter, a leading expert on serial killers, wrote a best-selling book about the Gein case called Deviant. In this book, Schechter mentions that Plainfield sheriff Art Schley physically assaulted Gein during questioning by banging Gein's head and face into a brick wall; because of this, Gein's initial confession was ruled inadmissible. Schley died of a heart attack at the age of 43 shortly before Gein's trial. Many who knew him said he was so traumatized by the horror of Gein's crimes and the fear of having to testify (notably about assaulting Gein) that it led to his early death. One of his friends said, "He was a victim of Ed Gein as surely as if he had butchered him."

Gein was found mentally incompetent and thus unfit to stand trial at the time of his arrest, and was sent to the Central State Hospital (now the Dodge Correctional Institution) in Waupun, Wisconsin. Later, Central State Hospital was converted into a prison and Gein was transferred to Mendota State Hospital in Madison, Wisconsin. In 1968, Gein's doctors determined he was sane enough to stand trial; he was found not guilty by reason of insanity and spent the rest of his life in the hospital.

While Gein was in detention, his house burned to the ground. Arson was suspected. In 1958, Gein's car, which he used to haul the bodies of his victims, was sold at public auction for a then-considerable sum of $760 to an enterprising carnival sideshow operator named Bunny Gibbons. Gibbons called his attraction the "Ed Gein Ghoul Car" and charged carnival-goers 25 cents admission to see it.


Death

On July 26, 1984, Ed Gein died of respiratory and heart failure in Goodland Hall at the Mendota Mental Health Institute[5] At his death, he cursed the name of his mother and an unknown person named Anne. His gravesite in the Plainfield cemetery was frequently vandalized over the years; souvenir seekers would chip off pieces of his gravestone before the bulk of it was stolen in 2000. The gravestone was recovered in June 2001 near Seattle and is presently displayed in a Wautoma, Wisconsin museum.

Click only if you care to see some of Ed's handiwork and a less encyclopedic article on his crimes:

http://www.rotten.com/library/bio/crime/serial-killers/ed-gein/
 
A serial killer's chipped gravestone is in a museum?

Who runs it, Gomez Addams?
 
Ed Gein truly is a deviation of humanity. The fact that such twisted individuals can be brought into existence is really an indication of how fucked up this planet is really.
 
BUFFALO BILL
 
Mentalist said:
Ed Gein truly is a deviation of humanity. The fact that such twisted individuals can be brought into existence is really an indication of how fucked up this planet is really.

I'd say that people like that are more of a REACTION to how fucked up this planet (or human society, at the very least) is.
 
True enough on a number of levels. Though it also shows what a wide range of psychological deviations are possible.

It's born out of how people react to the world around them and how that information is processed and then acted upon.
 
It's all his mother's fault. The whore!
 
He just needed to "find" Jesus.
 
CaptainWacky said:
He just needed to "find" Jesus.

It always makes me laugh when the killer "finds" religion.

Religion factors into much murder, war, hatecrimes, and persecution.

Religion and death go together like peanut butter and jelly!

Religion is what prevents the poor from murdering the rich --Napoleon
 
I thought the law was what prevented the poor from murdering the rich.
 
The quote points to the fact that morality comes from somewhere outside of ourselves. It also makes the point that inequality is part of a divine plan and that it will not be so in Heaven.

Of course the judicial system and a wish to be rich and strive for it stops the poor from murdering the rich as well. I don't think the quote is meant to be scholarly in any way.
 
It's ironic that laws derive from morality which derives from religion. And all religions are initially persecuted by the government/laws of the time, but then the religion wins the struggle and becomes owner of the government/law which persecutes other/newer religions. Now the question is which came first? Religion or the Law?

(Oh, and religion is hypocritical.)
 
That pic of his of Mrs Whateverhernamewas (the hardware store lady) dressed out like a deer in the barn??

Good fucking shit.

You just discovered ol Eddie, Menty? Y'know when Ed's mom died, he tried to "will" her back? Sat out by her grave for almost six months trying to do that before he finally dug her up, took her home and made a nice little skin suit out of her, which he would then wear and chatter amiably at his sexy self.

Want to know where Hitchcock's Psycho directly came from? There you go.

Both TCSM's owe their myth's to Eddie too.
 
He's a total inspiration to modern film horror.
 
jack said:
That pic of his of Mrs Whateverhernamewas (the hardware store lady) dressed out like a deer in the barn??

Good fucking shit.

You just discovered ol Eddie, Menty? Y'know when Ed's mom died, he tried to "will" her back? Sat out by her grave for almost six months trying to do that before he finally dug her up, took her home and made a nice little skin suit out of her, which he would then wear and chatter amiably at his sexy self.

Want to know where Hitchcock's Psycho directly came from? There you go.

Both TCSM's owe their myth's to Eddie too.

No, no... I've known about Ed Gein for a long while. The reason I started the "Serial Killer of the day" series is because I read about serial killers quite a lot. That morbid fascination thing I guess. It's just so fucking crazy. I guess that's why crime is such an interesting subject. And serial killers are such an extreme social construct that it can't help but make interesting reading.

And yah, that pic is mad! What a complete loonbox.

This site is good:

http://www.crimelibrary.com/

It has loads of fully fledged stories and accounts on hundreds of cases. They read like books. Everyone from Mengele to the Unabomber. Often 20+ pages of everything about the case from inception to end.
 
That's what's so interesting about American Psycho. Ellis seems to have pegged the pulse of it, without having to resort to actually killing people.
 
I have the same morbid fascination. I used to be able to name a serial killer based just on what they did, but I've been slacking lately.

Ed Gein's extremely interesting.
 
I've never read it. I've seen the movie though. I remember it being quite good. And also this little gem is from it:

pleasedie54360e4af8.jpg


:D


I might put the book down on my "to read list" though.
 
If I did a meme of Gein with 'Gein'Rly' would that be in poor taste?
 
Mentalist said:
I've never read it. I've seen the movie though. I remember it being quite good. And also this little gem is from it:

pleasedie54360e4af8.jpg


:D


I might put the book down on my "to read list" though.

You. Must. Read. The. Book.
 
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