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The Killer Book of True Crime
Incredible Stories, Facts and Trivia from the World of Murder and Mayhem
by 
Tom Philbin
Michael Philbin
  
Average rating: 
Publisher: Sourcebooks, Inc.
Pub Date: 7/1/2007
Subject(s):  Nonfiction
True Crime
Language(s):  English

Format Information

Adobe PDF eBook Add to eCart
Available copies:  
Library copies:  
File size:   11237 KB
ISBN:   9781402230417
Release date:   May 05, 2009

Description

The Killer Book of True Crime is the ultimate collection of in-depth stories, trivia, quizzes, quotes and photos gruesome and interesting enough to make any crime buff shudder in horrified delight. You’ve read all the stories…but can you match the mobster with the way he met his end? Do you know how they caught the Boston Strangler? Can you define chickens, a Shotaro complex or Colombian neckties?

The Killer Book of True Crime is the ultimate collection of in-depth stories, trivia, quizzes, quotes and photos gruesome and interesting enough to make any crime buff shudder in horrified delight. Discover all the odd and intriguing facts and tidbits you’ve never heard

Excerpts

Chapter 14: Female Killers...

Q. What happened at these addresses?

924 Belmont Avenue, Lincoln, Nebraska

South 24th Street, Lincoln, Nebraska

Superior Street, North of Lincoln, Nebraska

August Meyer Farm, Lincoln, Nebraska

Highway 87, off Ayers Road, Wyoming

A. Charles Starkweather and his girlfriend Caril Fugate murdered a series of people in these locations starting in January 1958.

Q. Are female serial killers more efficient than male serial killers?

A. Most experts say yes. Females are quiet killers with low visibility. In 1998, Kelleher and Kelleher examined the careers of one hundred female serial killers and found that, in one hundred murders since 1900, it took eight years to catch a female serial killer—double that of a male.

Q. What percentage of serial killers are female?

A. Female serial killers account for only 8 percent of all American serial killers, but American females account for 76 percent of all female serial killers worldwide.

Uniquely Feminine Killers

There are two types of killers that are overwhelmingly female.

1. Black Widow. Someone who kills her spouse or other family member, usually for financial gain.

2. Angel of Death. Nurse or other medical worker who kills patients.

Black Widows

The name, of course, comes from the black widow spider, who kills her mate after mating. Human black widows do the same thing.

Black widows usually start killing after the age of twenty-five, beginning a decade or longer cycle of systematically killing spouses, partners, family members, and indeed, anyone with whom they develop a personal relationship. They usually claim six to eight victims over period of ten to fifteen years, although in places where law enforcement is lax, the victim count could go as high as thirteen or fourteen. Poison that can’t be detected easily is the preferred method of murder. Following are some infamous black widows and the years they were active.

1. Belle Gunness (1896–1908) lived on a farm outside Chicago and was known as “Lady Bluebeard.” She was the first known twentieth-century black widow. She murdered forty-nine people, she but was never prosecuted. She killed adults, children, ranch workers—anyone. Most of them were poisoned.

2. Amy Gilligan (1901–1914) ran a private nursing home in Windsor, Connecticut, and married and killed five older men and got herself named in the wills of nine elderly women before killing them. Eventually her crimes were discovered, and she died in prison.

3. Lydia Trueblood (1915–1919) operated in Pocatello, Idaho, and poisoned her only child as well as her brother-in-law—not to mention five husbands.

4. Rhonda Bell Martin (1932–1956) murdered her mother, two husbands, and five of her children in Birmingham, Alabama. She was caught and died in the electric chair.

5. Waneta Hoyt (1965–1971) suffocated five of her six children in Oswego, New York. She claimed sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) was responsible for the deaths, but she was convicted of murder in 1995 and sentenced to life in prison.

6.Margie Velma Barfield (1969–1978), of Lumbetton, North Carolina, killed seven husbands, a handful of fiancés, and her mother. She burned some victims to death while they slept (made to look like smoking in bed), arranged prescription drug overdoses for others, and occasionally used arsenic made to look like gastroenteritis. She was finally caught for the murder of her boyfriend, Stuart Taylor, when an autopsy found traces of arsenic in his system. She was sentenced to and died by lethal injection in 1984, the first woman to be executed in the U.S. since 1976.

7. Blanche Taylor Moore (1966–1989) of Burlington, North Carolina, varied her M.O., doing away with lovers, husbands, her pastor, her...

 

Table of Contents

Introduction: Welcome to Gore Galore

Chapter 1: Robbery
Chapter 2: Organized Crimes and Gangs
Chapter 3: Prostitution
Chapter 4: Serial Murder
Chapter 5: Mass Murder
Chapter 6: Criminal Investigation
Chapter 7: Rape
Chapter 8: Sexual Perversions
Chapter 9: Terrorism
Chapter 10: Auto Theft
Chapter 11: Death Row
Chapter 12: Prisons
Chapter 13: Stalking
Chapter 14: Female Killers
Chapter 15: Arson
Chapter 16: Celebrities and Crime
Chapter 17: Kids Who Kill
Chapter 18: Miscellaneous
Chapter 19: Mostly Gore (Not Al)

Index
About the Authors

About the Author

Tom Philbin and his brother Mike have been close to crime (and its consequences) for many years. Tom is a long-time freelance writer who has written nine cop novels. He lives in New York. Mike Philbin is a musician, and this is his first book. Mike lives in New Hampshire.

Digital Rights Information

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Print:  allowed with no limitations
 
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