The Night Stalker didn't have a typical type of person that he would kill. He would kill anybody -- children, elderly, men, women. It seems most killers have a type of person they typically kill, but not him.
Interesting thing about Edmond Kemper is they didn't "Catch" him. He actually handed himself in because he knew he would never stop. Infact, he called to turn himself in, got hung up on, and had to call back and convince them that he wasn't joking because a lot of the station knew him. He would hang out at the same bar where police would go to unwind after work.
@@deavenswainey6415 The opposite happened in the case of Richard Ramirez's death- they couldn't find anyone in the family who wanted to take the body. It was months before someone finally agreed to take the remains.
The two that scared me the most were Manson and Bundy. Manson because of the control he seemed to have over his followers and Bundy because he seemed so charming and normal. Complete opposites yet equally scary and deadly.
I agree with you on one point, bundy is scary. The way he killed women and his motives are beyond comprehension for anyone who isn’t seriously sick. But out of this list Manson is the least scary to me. To me he’s just a pathetic little man who failed at life who decided to take it out on society. He prayed on people who were easy to influence because he was mad that he was nothing
His followers are scarier than he is, at least in my view. I wouldn’t be scared if he backed me into a corner. But the psychos that actually oiled people for him? I wouldn’t want to have to deal with them
Everyone, including teachers and his own father said he went through high school drunk everyday. They say after like 15 yrs old he was just waking up getting hammered all day throughout school. I'd assume his being a full blown alcoholic throughout adolescence while simultaneously suppressing his homosexuality wasn't a great recipe, but I'm not big on excuses. The day he was beaten to death was a great memory.
You should watch the parole hearings that Manson had. They really show how crazy he was or wanted people to think he was. Aileen hated men so it would have been a good idea for you guys to cross the street if you saw her.
I'll be honest, there's a couple of these guys that would probably have me duped. That last lady is total batshit but Ed Kemper would have come off as one of my offensive lineman friends who I'd hang out with.
Yes, you nailed the différence with Ramirez. Many of the others are charismatic, intelligent, and can even seem to fit into society. Ramirez is none of that. Just a straight up terrifying monster
i'd say Ramirez is very similar to Toole and Manson because of the fact that all of them were basically nurtured into monsters, they have seen nothing but evil and ugliness of this world and turned evil themselves. it's kind of impossible to imagine them becoming anything else.
I'm sure someone else has already said this but "Monster" is the name of the Charlize Theron movie about Aileen Wuornos. Charlize does an incredible job in that film.
I’m with you Dave-Richard Kuklinski-Iceman-is my fav too- not my fav killer(don’t have one) but favorite interview of a serial killer,his 3 part interview with a psychiatrist is intriguing to watch. They have all three parts on UA-cam.
His record states 2 murders, 7 murdered by proxy and 4 arsons. He’s also the one who tied up the LaBianca’s and then instructed them how to kill them. It’s said that despite being branded a murderer, he never actually killed anyone. Myself? I can’t believe everything I’ve read and watched about his life and his followers could ever make me believe he hadn’t killed some one in his life. I believe there is so much more to his story and we will just never know. He died and it was a big deal when he died. It was a relief.
Richard Ramirez was not the Original Night Stalker, but he is one of them. I watched a documentary awhile back on the original nightstalker case that some amateur crime followers and sleuths solved who the original night stalker was. It was a really good documentary.
According to Mike Love of the Beach Boys, he said in his autobiography that his bandmate Dennis Wilson told him that he saw Manson murder a man while on Manson's ranch.
Sagawaho's later publicity and twisted notoriety apparently contributed to the decision to extradite him from France to Japan. Immediately after his arrival, he was escorted to the hospital, where he was subjected to a psychological examination. All the examining psychologists declared him mentally sane. They stated that sexual perversion was the only motive for the murder. Japanese authorities were legally unable to detain him because the French government refused to release the court documents (which are still secret), claiming that the case had already been closed in France. As a result, Sagawa checked himself out of the mental institution on August 12, 1986 and became a free man.
6:50 "Satanism" He was not a Satanist he was a crazy person. We do not believe in the existence of Satan or the supernatural. The Satanic Temple believes that religion can, and should, be divorced from superstition. As such, we do not promote a belief in a personal Satan. To embrace the name Satan is to embrace rational inquiry removed from supernaturalism and archaic tradition-based superstitions. Satanists should actively work to hone critical thinking and exercise reasonable agnosticism in all things. Our beliefs must be malleable to the best current scientific understandings of the material world - never the reverse.
Charles Manson...at the LaBianca house....broke in and tied the couple up at gun point....left and let his lackeys do the dirty work....good enough for murder charge. Law of Parties or whatever.
the thing about Jeffrey Dahmer is that he looks so normal, his demeanor and body language is normal, his manner of speaking is normal, but the things he's saying decidedly are not.
@@RanabirDan Technically, he wasn't insane at all, legally. He wasn't psychotic, nor operating under any delusions. He understood what he was doing and understood that it was wrong. He appeared to feel guilt, just not enough to stop. He wasn't actually a psychopath either, not like Ramirez, who understood what he was doing was wrong and simply didn't care.
@@RanabirDan People with borderline personality disorder aren't "insane". They have maladaptive attachment patterns, but the disorder isn't connected to violence. By legal definition, a person is insane when a person is unable to grasp the consequences of their actions and thus unable to be held accountable. Clinically, a person is insane when they are suffering from some form of psychosis or delusional beliefs. It doesn't simply means having some type of mental disorder. Sociopaths aren't necessarily insane, either.
@@moonlily1 Borderline personality disorder doesn't make you insane but sociopathy does he was quite clearly a sociopath and I doubt that he was instead a psychopath cuz he said he was always like that
According to Michael Thompson, Manson was a punk. IF you don't know who Michael Thompson is look him up on the you tubes, he's got a very interesting story. 👍🍀
Manson didn't kill anyone. He was labeled the "mastermind" by the actual people that committed the crime and news papers ran with it. Manson had a history of criminal behavior but it was mostly theft and breaking into homes. His persona is one he had to create to survive growing up in juvenile prison and having little social skills. He was a failed musician that enjoyed making bold proclamations to sound intelligent. The fact that Manson is considered a "serial killer" still blows my mind and should be corrected by those that study such criminal behavior. Manson may be a sociopath...But he never killed anyone. I think Manson is angry about his life and he just decided to go along with what society has labeled him.
Please dont turn into a Watchmojo/Buzzfeed channel. I really like you guys, dont stoop to that level of ai generated scripts that just spew out bullshit labeled as fact because its targeted at 12 year olds that dont know better.
Night Stalker targeted adults for the most part. He had a drug habit so he'd break into people's houses at night to burglarize. If people were there, he'd attack them, sexually assault the women most of the time, but not all of the time I'm pretty sure and degrading them more after the assault by making them swear on Satan and say I love Satan and stuff, which for a religious person would be awful I'm sure. He didn't kill every time. I guess just whenever he felt like it or if he felt a husband or something would be able to call for help or identify him or if the women got too good of a look at his face (or so he thought, because some survivors were able to get sketch artists to draw him). I think the only time he specifically went after a kid was about a year before he started his big killing spree. He lured an 8 or 9 year old girl into a basement and killed her. And her death wasn't even linked to him until 2009.
I grew up in San Francisco in the 80s and even though he was down south in Los Angeles the "Night Stalker" scared the hell out of me as a kid. The local news was always reporting about him.
Let me tell you a true story! I live in North Carolina (East Coast). My mom's friend Brenda moved to California (West Coast). So, one day she was washing dishes and just happened to look out her window and saw ''The Night Stalker'' drive slow up her street as he looked back at her. Later that night she heard someone trying to break into her house. She said it had to been him. It wasn't too long after that they caught him! Small world!
It’s definitely interesting but it becomes an issue when someone’s motive for finding out such things is that they want to excuse their behaviour. Not saying that’s what you want, just making a point.
@@justlooking1087 aggree there is no excuse. I myself have had a really rough childhood with plenty of traumas but I do know that a bad childhood full of mental and physical abuse and neglect can lead to narcissism, psychopathy and sociopathy. Which is a common trait that most serial killers have. So it isnt an excuse but can be a cause.
How about the ones who grow up in a loving home? I've seen several true crime shows where there didn't seem to be an outward reason for their psychopathy. I guess it goes back to nature vs nurture, which is a stupid argument because the two can't be separated. It's a self-perpetuating circle where each side influences the other.
@@angelagraves865 yeah thats the interesting part, there are a lot who didnt have a bad childhood at all, like the guy who called Howard Stern. Some people say that psychopathy or sociopathy can also be passed from parent to child or is a trait that someone can be born with. So I think it can be both something you can be born with or something that can manifest itself in someone. Nevertheless it is really interesting what these people think and feel about what they have done.
Are they sure that’s Eileen Warhol‘s? I think that was Ted Nugent, or did she escape and become Ted Nugent? I never have seen both of them in the same room, have you? Yep that’s gotta be Ted Nugent.
I remember it well when Charles Manson died because there were too many idiots on social media saying "R.I.P." to him. They thought he was the musical artist (MARILYN Manson). 🤦🏻♂️
I think the thing with Manson is his story became a legend of sorts in his own time, and he was just some little punk ass, he couldn’t kill anybody, but then again neither could I.. but his name made him a big deal in his mind.. the worlds a better place since he passed away or I should say the devil finally took him..
Richard Ramirez once wrote a letter to the once backup singer Sarah Jezabel Deva of Cradle of filth at the time and I’ve read the photocopy of it in my copy of the Gospel of filth and it’s pretty creepy.
If you are able to share a link or highlight of the letter. Would be interesting to see. I at one point was thinking of writing to him when I was a teenager. After what you shared I am glad I did not.
Ugh. You’re thumbnail of Richard Ramirez! He was notorious in Southern California when I was a kid. I remember when he was caught. Such a relief to everyone. If I remember correctly, one of his victims was found behind some bushes on a school campus in our school district. I was a kid, so I could be remembering it wrong. I think he went to the same high school as my older brother and at the same time period, too. His face gives me the creeps.
The Ice Man. That’s my husband’s favorite. There is actually a great interview with him on HBO He talks very candidly about his life. What he won’t talk about is his family. Everything was just a job to him.
You know his story is complete nonsense, right? He did kill 3 or 4 men, but it was personal issues, not "orders by the Families". It's well known here anyhow, that his story is just fake.
Manson died 5 years ago, and then some fella bought some of his ashes and got a "HELTER SKELTER" tattoo on his face with the ashes mixed with the ink... Pretty sure the Police need to be keeping an eye on the fella....
The thing is, that rage and beast within is always there, it’s just something you learn to suppress. It’s just that when a killer finds a victim, could be a trigger because they look like someone, or may be physically attractive. You begin to look at that person as a victim, or a target. Just another lamb to the slaughter. It’s the mindset of an Apex Predator. Anyone can kill, but it’s the ability to transmute IQ along with the hunt. That’s where the cerebral nature of a killer is developed, and when you realize you have true power. It’s when you’ve isolated your target and you smell fear. Then you can take the mask off and unleash the beast within. Looks on the outside are irrelevant, in fact it’s more of a trap. When you kill your target, it’s an insatiable hunger that needs to be fulfilled again and again. It’s not necessarily the kill that makes it addicting, more so it’s the process of the kill. Everything that takes place. It’s where you chased your prey and they knocked over that vase in the living room and fell, which allowed you to go for the killing blow. You can replay those feelings and moments in your mind. It’s the THRILL of the hunt. It’s also where you analyze where you made mistakes, and how you can improve the next hunt. It’s only when you get sloppy and content when you get caught. And many people wonder how someone can be so beautiful and nice and outgoing and caring yet be a serial killer at the same time. The answer is simple… yes, that beast within is still there as always, you learn to suppress it and use it to your advantage. You are still you, it’s just that, that beast is also you as well. A different part you isolate and keep separate and locked away until you run across someone that has that key that is able to unleash that beast within. I hope that gives you some insight into the minds of these killers.
Watch this ‘The Iceman Confesses: Secrets of a Mafia Hitman’. Not technically a serial killer, but I never gotten the chills more than watching this on HBO.
The Night Stalker didn't have a typical type of person that he would kill. He would kill anybody -- children, elderly, men, women. It seems most killers have a type of person they typically kill, but not him.
Manson died in prison, Ramirez died in prison of cancer, Dalmer was murdered in prison while Gacy and Bundy were executed. So was Wuornos.
Interesting thing about Edmond Kemper is they didn't "Catch" him. He actually handed himself in because he knew he would never stop. Infact, he called to turn himself in, got hung up on, and had to call back and convince them that he wasn't joking because a lot of the station knew him. He would hang out at the same bar where police would go to unwind after work.
He would of had such a high body count. Tha k god
Ramirez was otherworldly with his evil. The guy stomped on a womans head until it was a puddle of mush.
Ill take "Things i wish would happen to several political leaders" for $500
@@MeMyself_andAI dont know where you live but I'd like this to happen to nearly all of them in my country xD
@@MeMyself_andAI trump should be first
@@kimson305 hope you get a million updoots on your reddit karma for that fantastic take
@@kimson305 T.D.S?
Manson died in 2017 in prison. He was in the news a lot, whenever he or his family members were up for parole, etc.
He was in the news after he died for a while too. Three separate parties fought over the rights over what to do with his body.
@@deavenswainey6415 The opposite happened in the case of Richard Ramirez's death- they couldn't find anyone in the family who wanted to take the body. It was months before someone finally agreed to take the remains.
Good riddance!
Yeah. I believe he was sentenced to death. But, California repealed the death penalty and he just died of old age
@@swinn848 He had colon cancer.
The two that scared me the most were Manson and Bundy. Manson because of the control he seemed to have over his followers and Bundy because he seemed so charming and normal.
Complete opposites yet equally scary and deadly.
I agree with you on one point, bundy is scary. The way he killed women and his motives are beyond comprehension for anyone who isn’t seriously sick. But out of this list Manson is the least scary to me. To me he’s just a pathetic little man who failed at life who decided to take it out on society. He prayed on people who were easy to influence because he was mad that he was nothing
The obvious ones are easy to guard yourself against. But the charming, normal looking ones! How does one guard against such??
Interesting. I could never take Manson seriously. Just failed CIA experiment.
His followers are scarier than he is, at least in my view.
I wouldn’t be scared if he backed me into a corner. But the psychos that actually oiled people for him? I wouldn’t want to have to deal with them
Nah bundy didn’t seem normal 🤣you can tell which moments envisioned what he did to those women and he seemed so satisfied …if yk what I mean smh
Fun fact... Jeffery Dahmer graduated from my high school lol. I actually had a teacher that had him as a student. Said he was a pretty quiet kid.
Everyone, including teachers and his own father said he went through high school drunk everyday. They say after like 15 yrs old he was just waking up getting hammered all day throughout school. I'd assume his being a full blown alcoholic throughout adolescence while simultaneously suppressing his homosexuality wasn't a great recipe, but I'm not big on excuses. The day he was beaten to death was a great memory.
@@rukus9585 Jeffrey Dahmer himself said it was the sexual fantasy tied in with wanting to murder someone that he was suppressing.
My brothers friend lived in his apartment building
@@MeanLaQueefa The Oxford Apartment where Dahmer was caught? Is you're brothers friend ok. I can't even imagine..
"I think the best thing would be getting them all in a room together, and---"
"Filling it with water?"
LMAO
You should watch the parole hearings that Manson had. They really show how crazy he was or wanted people to think he was. Aileen hated men so it would have been a good idea for you guys to cross the street if you saw her.
I'll be honest, there's a couple of these guys that would probably have me duped. That last lady is total batshit but Ed Kemper would have come off as one of my offensive lineman friends who I'd hang out with.
#2, his story is covered in a John Ballen episode. It's a story that is masterfully told by Mr. Ballen. But it is nonetheless terrifying
Yes, you nailed the différence with Ramirez. Many of the others are charismatic, intelligent, and can even seem to fit into society. Ramirez is none of that. Just a straight up terrifying monster
but he loves billy idol
Also, he fried his brain with angel dust, speed, and cocaine.
But he did blend in with society that's how he got away with his very disturbing crimes for as long as he did.
@@melissahogan868 ehhh I wouldn’t say he blended to well cause he smelled horribly
i'd say Ramirez is very similar to Toole and Manson because of the fact that all of them were basically nurtured into monsters, they have seen nothing but evil and ugliness of this world and turned evil themselves. it's kind of impossible to imagine them becoming anything else.
Dave, you should watch Nightstalker, The hunt for a serial killer. It's a documentary on netflix, I think you'll like it.
I'm sure someone else has already said this but "Monster" is the name of the Charlize Theron movie about Aileen Wuornos. Charlize does an incredible job in that film.
Ed Kemper is nearly 7 ft tall. No way I would have gotten into a car with him.
I also doubt anyone gave him a hard time in prison.
@@ryanjacobson2508
He is actually liked in prison, especially by the CO's. He is said to be respectful and never has been a problem.
I’m with you Dave-Richard Kuklinski-Iceman-is my fav too- not my fav killer(don’t have one) but favorite interview of a serial killer,his 3 part interview with a psychiatrist is intriguing to watch. They have all three parts on UA-cam.
His record states 2 murders, 7 murdered by proxy and 4 arsons. He’s also the one who tied up the LaBianca’s and then instructed them how to kill them. It’s said that despite being branded a murderer, he never actually killed anyone. Myself? I can’t believe everything I’ve read and watched about his life and his followers could ever make me believe he hadn’t killed some one in his life. I believe there is so much more to his story and we will just never know. He died and it was a big deal when he died. It was a relief.
american horror story season 5 all the serial killers in the same room having dinner hosted by hh holmes america's first serial killer
November 19, 2017 in Bakersfield California. He was 83 years old and was said to have died of natural causes
The evil & craziness is in most of their eyes! 😳👿
One day when Dave is going through a really bad day, Daz is going to pick on him and Dave will reach over and land a right cross on Daz's jaw.😆
Richard Ramirez was not the Original Night Stalker, but he is one of them. I watched a documentary awhile back on the original nightstalker case that some amateur crime followers and sleuths solved who the original night stalker was. It was a really good documentary.
Joseph D' Angelo is the Original Night Stalker. He was a former Police officer.
The strange thing about temper is that he's genuinely a likable dude lol The wardens the police officers they will tell you they like him
According to Mike Love of the Beach Boys, he said in his autobiography that his bandmate Dennis Wilson told him that he saw Manson murder a man while on Manson's ranch.
Crazy fact: The United States ranks #1 with the most serial killers at 3204 in #2 is England at 166
Holy crap! That gap is scary
That's documented serial killers. There's likely a lot of undocumented serial killers outside the first world.
Everybody Is Dead Except For Issei Sagawa, Gary Rdigway, And Edmund Kemper Are Still Alive And Ironically They Are All 73 Years Old Now
Sagawaho's later publicity and twisted notoriety apparently contributed to the decision to extradite him from France to Japan. Immediately after his arrival, he was escorted to the hospital, where he was subjected to a psychological examination. All the examining psychologists declared him mentally sane. They stated that sexual perversion was the only motive for the murder. Japanese authorities were legally unable to detain him because the French government refused to release the court documents (which are still secret), claiming that the case had already been closed in France. As a result, Sagawa checked himself out of the mental institution on August 12, 1986 and became a free man.
The Night Stalker documentary on Netflix is very well made btw
Edmund Kemper was enormous
Kemper is 6'9 and highly intelligent that's scary in itself
psychopaths are 1% of the population. We all have probably meet at least 1. 😂😂
6:50 "Satanism" He was not a Satanist he was a crazy person. We do not believe in the existence of Satan or the supernatural. The Satanic Temple believes that religion can, and should, be divorced from superstition. As such, we do not promote a belief in a personal Satan. To embrace the name Satan is to embrace rational inquiry removed from supernaturalism and archaic tradition-based superstitions. Satanists should actively work to hone critical thinking and exercise reasonable agnosticism in all things. Our beliefs must be malleable to the best current scientific understandings of the material world - never the reverse.
Ramirez believed in a real Diety which makes him Thiestic SatanisT
I never noticed how much Aileen looks like Ted Nugent. 😆
Valerie Burris Charles Manson died 2017.
Manson died in 2017
Charles Manson...at the LaBianca house....broke in and tied the couple up at gun point....left and let his lackeys do the dirty work....good enough for murder charge. Law of Parties or whatever.
Women actually found Ted bundy and the night stalker very attractive.
Mojo failed to properly describe these people and what they did. this is why i avoid them now when i used to watch them a lot
the thing about Jeffrey Dahmer is that he looks so normal, his demeanor and body language is normal, his manner of speaking is normal, but the things he's saying decidedly are not.
And ironically he was actually the most insane of all the killers
@@RanabirDan Technically, he wasn't insane at all, legally. He wasn't psychotic, nor operating under any delusions. He understood what he was doing and understood that it was wrong. He appeared to feel guilt, just not enough to stop. He wasn't actually a psychopath either, not like Ramirez, who understood what he was doing was wrong and simply didn't care.
@@moonlily1 He was diagnosed with borderline personality disorder and he definitely was a sociopath
@@RanabirDan People with borderline personality disorder aren't "insane". They have maladaptive attachment patterns, but the disorder isn't connected to violence. By legal definition, a person is insane when a person is unable to grasp the consequences of their actions and thus unable to be held accountable. Clinically, a person is insane when they are suffering from some form of psychosis or delusional beliefs. It doesn't simply means having some type of mental disorder. Sociopaths aren't necessarily insane, either.
@@moonlily1 Borderline personality disorder doesn't make you insane but sociopathy does he was quite clearly a sociopath and I doubt that he was instead a psychopath cuz he said he was always like that
According to Michael Thompson, Manson was a punk. IF you don't know who Michael Thompson is look him up on the you tubes, he's got a very interesting story. 👍🍀
Manson never personally murdered anyone and I don't think he was ever there when they happened.
Nope He Mentally Manipulated People To Kill For Him
you'll never see samuel little on these lists. the most prolific serial killers in u.s. history. i dunno why?🤔
6'9" Edward Kemper is scary as heck. A giant monster, but then again I would be safer than his choice of prey: women
Manson died in the town I live in Bakersfield CA no one wanted to claim his body till Marilyn Manson helped him get buried
i used to be a cereal killer when i was young.. i would smoke a joint and kill some apple jacks
How well would we know Manson if the Manson Family victims had been random people, I.e. not celebrities, wealthy, etc.?
Manson died a few years ago...lol
Lookup the crimes of Randy Kraft, Dean Corll or The Toolbox Killers
I love Richard
You gotta think of time period I'm pretty sure most of em 70's 80s and early 90s
Charles Bronson! 😂
Manson didn't kill anyone. He was labeled the "mastermind" by the actual people that committed the crime and news papers ran with it. Manson had a history of criminal behavior but it was mostly theft and breaking into homes. His persona is one he had to create to survive growing up in juvenile prison and having little social skills. He was a failed musician that enjoyed making bold proclamations to sound intelligent. The fact that Manson is considered a "serial killer" still blows my mind and should be corrected by those that study such criminal behavior. Manson may be a sociopath...But he never killed anyone. I think Manson is angry about his life and he just decided to go along with what society has labeled him.
Yes Dave the reason why there is a lot of white men serial killers is because the USA is a white country. Cmon now
He never killed anyone with his own hand.
What I noticed more than anything is that all but one are Americans.
Richard Kuklinsky,not Stanley.
Manson has been dead since 2017.
Hard to imagine that a woman married Manson just a few years before he died in prison
just a good ol Satanic ritual.
Charles Manson did die in prison
6:15 Ramirez is not wrong in that statement
Fill it with water 😂😂
Watch more of manson plsss
They seem like normal people to me. The only thing scary about this video is how popular watchmojo is.
The movie with Charlize Theron was called Monster the portrayal of this woman.
Manson is dead.
Charles Manson IS dead, and it was a big deal. Relief.
Charles Manson never killed anyone
Charles Manson is different in that he never actually committed any murders himself.
He did commit murders in the past before the Sharon tate killings
Please dont turn into a Watchmojo/Buzzfeed channel. I really like you guys, dont stoop to that level of ai generated scripts that just spew out bullshit labeled as fact because its targeted at 12 year olds that dont know better.
I'm just going to say it.....these guys are real jerks!!!!
Daz and mike are weird Dave not you
The Night Stalker story is crazy and yeah adults would stay clear of him on sight which is even sadder he targeted children.
Night Stalker targeted adults for the most part. He had a drug habit so he'd break into people's houses at night to burglarize. If people were there, he'd attack them, sexually assault the women most of the time, but not all of the time I'm pretty sure and degrading them more after the assault by making them swear on Satan and say I love Satan and stuff, which for a religious person would be awful I'm sure. He didn't kill every time. I guess just whenever he felt like it or if he felt a husband or something would be able to call for help or identify him or if the women got too good of a look at his face (or so he thought, because some survivors were able to get sketch artists to draw him).
I think the only time he specifically went after a kid was about a year before he started his big killing spree. He lured an 8 or 9 year old girl into a basement and killed her. And her death wasn't even linked to him until 2009.
It wasn't richard
Please react to Mr. Ballen
The Night Stalker looks so damn scary
Everybody hurts my Loved Richard Ramirez
@@giseleteixeira6954wtf 🧐📸
I grew up in San Francisco in the 80s and even though he was down south in Los Angeles the "Night Stalker" scared the hell out of me as a kid. The local news was always reporting about him.
Ramirez is the one that still scares the crap out of me. Definitely worth checking out the Netlix doc though.
@@Armanj88Wouldn't be if it was your loved one who was killed
Let me tell you a true story! I live in North Carolina (East Coast). My mom's friend Brenda moved to California (West Coast). So, one day she was washing dishes and just happened to look out her window and saw ''The Night Stalker'' drive slow up her street as he looked back at her. Later that night she heard someone trying to break into her house. She said it had to been him. It wasn't too long after that they caught him! Small world!
Big thumbs up for more and more spooky content 👍🏻
'Monster' was the name the of the movie of the Aileen Wournos story ,starring Charlize Theron. .
I might be late, but Manson is dead.
Manson pretty sick guy but he’s highly interesting to listen too
The psychology behind these people is quite interesting. I somehow want to know about their childhood and what made them turn the way they were or are
It’s definitely interesting but it becomes an issue when someone’s motive for finding out such things is that they want to excuse their behaviour. Not saying that’s what you want, just making a point.
@@justlooking1087 aggree there is no excuse. I myself have had a really rough childhood with plenty of traumas but I do know that a bad childhood full of mental and physical abuse and neglect can lead to narcissism, psychopathy and sociopathy. Which is a common trait that most serial killers have. So it isnt an excuse but can be a cause.
How about the ones who grow up in a loving home? I've seen several true crime shows where there didn't seem to be an outward reason for their psychopathy. I guess it goes back to nature vs nurture, which is a stupid argument because the two can't be separated. It's a self-perpetuating circle where each side influences the other.
@@angelagraves865 yeah thats the interesting part, there are a lot who didnt have a bad childhood at all, like the guy who called Howard Stern. Some people say that psychopathy or sociopathy can also be passed from parent to child or is a trait that someone can be born with. So I think it can be both something you can be born with or something that can manifest itself in someone. Nevertheless it is really interesting what these people think and feel about what they have done.
@@KilyanAustinyep, psychologically psychopaths are born and serial killers are made, so you can guess.
Are they sure that’s Eileen Warhol‘s? I think that was Ted Nugent, or did she escape and become Ted Nugent? I never have seen both of them in the same room, have you? Yep that’s gotta be Ted Nugent.
Ramirez would bust into victim’s homes at night, hence…
I remember it well when Charles Manson died because there were too many idiots on social media saying "R.I.P." to him. They thought he was the musical artist (MARILYN Manson). 🤦🏻♂️
I think the thing with Manson is his story became a legend of sorts in his own time, and he was just some little punk ass, he couldn’t kill anybody, but then again neither could I.. but his name made him a big deal in his mind.. the worlds a better place since he passed away or I should say the devil finally took him..
My mom told me she was terrified of the night stalker. Some of his murders were in the San Fernando Valley and one was a few miles away in Northridge.
zodiack is the most infamous of all
Richard Ramirez once wrote a letter to the once backup singer Sarah Jezabel Deva of Cradle of filth at the time and I’ve read the photocopy of it in my copy of the Gospel of filth and it’s pretty creepy.
If you are able to share a link or highlight of the letter. Would be interesting to see. I at one point was thinking of writing to him when I was a teenager. After what you shared I am glad I did not.
Please avoid watch mojo, it's overwatched crap.
Ugh. You’re thumbnail of Richard Ramirez!
He was notorious in Southern California when I was a kid. I remember when he was caught. Such a relief to everyone. If I remember correctly, one of his victims was found behind some bushes on a school campus in our school district. I was a kid, so I could be remembering it wrong.
I think he went to the same high school as my older brother and at the same time period, too. His face gives me the creeps.
He didn't move from Texas to California until he was 22, but he definitely had Southern California in total panic.
Manson died in November 2017
I think Ed Kemper would actually scare me the most because he is 6'9"
The Ice Man. That’s my husband’s favorite. There is actually a great interview with him on HBO He talks very candidly about his life. What he won’t talk about is his family. Everything was just a job to him.
Ditto
And his name was Richard, not Stanley.
You can tell that guy is full of shit
Yep. He was the best.
You know his story is complete nonsense, right? He did kill 3 or 4 men, but it was personal issues, not "orders by the Families". It's well known here anyhow, that his story is just fake.
One of your funniest openings blokes! Dave to Daz to Mike and off the rails already. Love it!
Manson has been dead for almost 5 years
He's dead, there was a whole thing about his prison wife trying to sell some of his body parts.
Manson died 5 years ago, and then some fella bought some of his ashes and got a "HELTER SKELTER" tattoo on his face with the ashes mixed with the ink... Pretty sure the Police need to be keeping an eye on the fella....
The thing is, that rage and beast within is always there, it’s just something you learn to suppress. It’s just that when a killer finds a victim, could be a trigger because they look like someone, or may be physically attractive. You begin to look at that person as a victim, or a target. Just another lamb to the slaughter. It’s the mindset of an Apex Predator. Anyone can kill, but it’s the ability to transmute IQ along with the hunt. That’s where the cerebral nature of a killer is developed, and when you realize you have true power. It’s when you’ve isolated your target and you smell fear. Then you can take the mask off and unleash the beast within. Looks on the outside are irrelevant, in fact it’s more of a trap. When you kill your target, it’s an insatiable hunger that needs to be fulfilled again and again. It’s not necessarily the kill that makes it addicting, more so it’s the process of the kill. Everything that takes place. It’s where you chased your prey and they knocked over that vase in the living room and fell, which allowed you to go for the killing blow. You can replay those feelings and moments in your mind. It’s the THRILL of the hunt. It’s also where you analyze where you made mistakes, and how you can improve the next hunt. It’s only when you get sloppy and content when you get caught. And many people wonder how someone can be so beautiful and nice and outgoing and caring yet be a serial killer at the same time. The answer is simple… yes, that beast within is still there as always, you learn to suppress it and use it to your advantage. You are still you, it’s just that, that beast is also you as well. A different part you isolate and keep separate and locked away until you run across someone that has that key that is able to unleash that beast within. I hope that gives you some insight into the minds of these killers.
Watch this ‘The Iceman Confesses: Secrets of a Mafia Hitman’. Not technically a serial killer, but I never gotten the chills more than watching this on HBO.
Manson wasn’t even near the crime scenes.