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 The 7 Most Notorious Serial Killers in History

    7-most-notorious-serial-killers-inhas not been formalized by any legal code, the crimes of a serial killer have often been confiscated by the media and public consciousness – particularly in cases where there are multiple victims or murders committed in gruesome fashion. Goes. The following list explores some of the most infamous serial killers the world has ever known.

The 7 Most Notorious Serial Killers in History
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1-Ted Bundy


Ted Bundy liked to draw attention to his murders, and many in the United States were happy to give him that attention. Western U.S. He had a hunting ground, which had committed an unknown number of murders—mostly college-age women—from Washington and Oregon to Utah and Colorado. Bundy was once arrested in Colorado and convicted of kidnapping, but he escaped custody, moving to Florida where he committed several more murders. Bundy’s eventual arrest and its aftermath caught the attention of the nation, as the accused murderer acted as his lawyer in what is believed to be the first televised murder trial, welcomed interviews, and produced by him. Fans claimed. He was eventually killed in an electric chair in 1989.

2-Pedro Lopez


One of the world’s most prolific serial killers may still be out. Pedro López is linked to more than 300 murders in his native Colombia and Ecuador and Peru. At least a third of those murders were tribal women. After Lopez’s arrest in 1980, police found the graves of more than 50 of his former victims. In court he was convicted of the murders of 110 girls (in Ecuador) and 240 other murders (in Colombia and Peru), which he confessed. “Monster of the Andes” did not even spend 20 years in prison, as he was released in 1998 for good behavior. He remained at an unknown location for over 20 years.

3-H.H. holmes


Chicago has had its share of murderers, but perhaps nothing was more haunting than H.H. Holmes, the pharmacist who turned a hotel into a torture palace. Before the 1893 World’s Fair, Holmes moved to Chicago and began designing a three-story hotel with all manner of nefarious equipment, including gas lines, secret passageways and traps, hallways to dead ends, chutes to basements, soundproof Padding and Torcher included. Tools scattered throughout a maze. Whatever was about to happen before the gas allowed Holmes to disperse his guests, often on his surgical table. He then burnt the bodies in the building’s furnace, sold the skeletons to medical schools and ran life insurance scams. In all, he faced more than 30 murders—before he was hanged in 1896—found only after a fellow scammer had given him up for falling short on financial settlement.

4-John Wayne Gacy


A construction worker known as an outgoing by his suburban neighbors, John Wayne Gacy was involved in politics and even worked as a clown for birthday parties. He was no joker.
Gacy came under suspicion when a 15-year-old boy who lived with him went missing in 1978. It wasn’t the only time the families of the missing boys had pointed fingers at Gacy, but it was the first time authorities took him seriously. Soon after, a search warrant gave police access to Gacy’s home, which smelled of about 30 bodies in a four-foot crawl space beneath his home. He was sentenced on 33 counts with additional counts of murder, rape and torture. He was put to death by a toxic injection in 1994.

5-Harold Shipman


Harold Shipman, known as “Dr. 218 patients died from work to death, some people of that time said. But some people put the death toll up to 250.. This doctor practiced in London and worked in two different offices between 1972 and 1998, leading to death all the time. He was not caught until a red flag was raised by many, including an undertaker, who was shocked by the sheer number of cremation certificates, along with the fact that most cases were elderly women. Went. Not at night but in bed during the day. Police mishandled the investigation, and Shipman continued to kill until he became greedy and tried to make a will for a victim, who named him as the beneficiary, leaving the victim’s daughter suspicious. Ultimately he was convicted by the court in 2000 but while serving his sentence in jail, he committed suicide ( 2004 ).

6-Jeffrey Dahmer


    Jeffrey Dahmer began murder in 1978 at just 18 years old, and was not arrested on murder charges until 1991, after a victim fled and took the police back to his Milwaukee, Wisconsin, home of Asphalt. gone. It was there that some of the gruesome details of his murdered life were seen through photographs of bodies and body parts scattered throughout the apartment. He even had a bucket of acid which he used to dispose of the victims. In all, Dahmer killed 17 people, mostly young people of color. She served time in prison twice – the first time for molestation and the second time for murder – and was murdered in 1994 by a fellow inmate.

7-Jack the Ripper


     People call him “Jack the Ripper,” but we don’t really know who was behind one of the oldest and most infamous murders. The killer appeared in the Whitechapel district of London in 1888 and murdered five women – all prostitutes – and mutilated their corpses. Police speculated that the killer was a surgeon, butcher, or someone skilled with a scalpel. The killer made fun of the community and the police by sending letters outlining the acts. Although several suspects have been named over the years, the killer has never been identified.

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