Emily. 20. Ireland. Vegetarian.
Jimi Hendrix. Lou Reed. Bruce Springsteen. Bob Dylan. AC/DC. T-Rex. Joy Division. The Cure. The Runaways, Lolita. 1984. Bully. The Catcher in the Rye. The Rules of Attraction. The Beach. The Perks of Being a Wallflower. Looking for Alaska. Veronika Decides to Die.


May 26th
1:26 PM


Female Killers
Nearly one out of five serial murderers are women. In fact, they are often more deadly and more prolific than typical male serial killers. Female serial killers are described as the  “quiet killers” because they rarely leave bodies dumped by the roadside, which alarm a community. Their killing careers last twice as long as men’s: eight years for women to the male serial killer’s average of just over four years. Their killing is often committed at home of in a professional setting such as a hospital, retirement home, boardinghouse, or hotel, where sometimes it is not even notices or recognised as a murder. A study of incarcerated female non-serial murderers found out that on average 77 percent were unemployed when they committed their offends, 65 percent were black, and 76 percent had children, and their median age was twenty-seven. Female killers are young and poor, and often function in a socioeconomic class where interpersonal violence is more frequent and “acceptable.”
The statistics for specifically female serial killers are substantially different: 95 percent were white, their median age was thirty and only 10 percent were known to be unemployed, while 10 percent were skilled workers, 15 percent were semiskilled, and 11 percent were other, such as self-employed or business proprietors (and 42 percent unknown). Poor unemployed women living in a society where often responding with interpersonal violence is the only way to survive may commit a spontaneous homicide in the heat of a moment. But the more middle-class female serial killers contemplated and planned their murders carefully.
The motives of female serial killers are substantially different from those of the female single killer or even the male serial killer. On average, 74 percent of female serial killers were at least in part motivated by personal financial gain, a sad reflection on their middle-class aspirations.

Female Killers

Nearly one out of five serial murderers are women. In fact, they are often more deadly and more prolific than typical male serial killers. Female serial killers are described as the “quiet killers” because they rarely leave bodies dumped by the roadside, which alarm a community. Their killing careers last twice as long as men’s: eight years for women to the male serial killer’s average of just over four years. Their killing is often committed at home of in a professional setting such as a hospital, retirement home, boardinghouse, or hotel, where sometimes it is not even notices or recognised as a murder. A study of incarcerated female non-serial murderers found out that on average 77 percent were unemployed when they committed their offends, 65 percent were black, and 76 percent had children, and their median age was twenty-seven. Female killers are young and poor, and often function in a socioeconomic class where interpersonal violence is more frequent and “acceptable.”

The statistics for specifically female serial killers are substantially different: 95 percent were white, their median age was thirty and only 10 percent were known to be unemployed, while 10 percent were skilled workers, 15 percent were semiskilled, and 11 percent were other, such as self-employed or business proprietors (and 42 percent unknown). Poor unemployed women living in a society where often responding with interpersonal violence is the only way to survive may commit a spontaneous homicide in the heat of a moment. But the more middle-class female serial killers contemplated and planned their murders carefully.

The motives of female serial killers are substantially different from those of the female single killer or even the male serial killer. On average, 74 percent of female serial killers were at least in part motivated by personal financial gain, a sad reflection on their middle-class aspirations.

May 18th
2:47 PM

Near Christmas time, 1989, the body of Richard Mallory was found in woods in Ormond Beach, Florida.  He had been shot 4 times with a .22 handgun.  Twelve more months past, 6 more dead men were found.  All the victims were middle aged and found near highways.  They had been robbed of money and valuable possessions, and their cars had been stolen and found shortly afterwards.  All the victims had been shot by a .22 handgun. The FBI knew that there was one or two female serial killers on the loose.  If the killer/s was male, there had been no evidence of homosexual activity.  It was clear that the motive wasn’t just gain. The announcement of a female serial killer set the media into a frenzy.  Soon after witnesses came forward to give police descriptions of two women seen abandoning a car belonging to that of one of the dead men. The descriptions were released in December 1990, soon after people came forward who recognised the pictures as 28-year-old Tyria J. Moore and 34-year-old Aileen Wuornos.  Moore was arrested by police and agreed to testify against Wuornos, who was her lesbian partner.
In January 1991 Wuornos was arrested and confessed to killing the men in self defense as they had tried to rape her.  The question raised that brought her claims to be false was why would a woman shoot several men who had supposedly tried rape her in the space of just 12 months.  She also told of how Moore was not involved in any of the crimes committed.  She then went to go on about her past of how her grandfather had sexually abused her and that she was raped at 13. Moore was released and Wournos faced trial.  In court the evidence summed up and Wuornos was sentenced to the electric chair. Wournos was unlike other female serial killers, who’s motive is usually profit.  But in this case the motive seemed to be revenge, because Wuornos had been raped and abused by men.

Near Christmas time, 1989, the body of Richard Mallory was found in woods in Ormond Beach, Florida.  He had been shot 4 times with a .22 handgun.  Twelve more months past, 6 more dead men were found.  All the victims were middle aged and found near highways.  They had been robbed of money and valuable possessions, and their cars had been stolen and found shortly afterwards.  All the victims had been shot by a .22 handgun. The FBI knew that there was one or two female serial killers on the loose.  If the killer/s was male, there had been no evidence of homosexual activity.  It was clear that the motive wasn’t just gain. The announcement of a female serial killer set the media into a frenzy.  Soon after witnesses came forward to give police descriptions of two women seen abandoning a car belonging to that of one of the dead men. The descriptions were released in December 1990, soon after people came forward who recognised the pictures as 28-year-old Tyria J. Moore and 34-year-old Aileen Wuornos.  Moore was arrested by police and agreed to testify against Wuornos, who was her lesbian partner.

In January 1991 Wuornos was arrested and confessed to killing the men in self defense as they had tried to rape her.  The question raised that brought her claims to be false was why would a woman shoot several men who had supposedly tried rape her in the space of just 12 months.  She also told of how Moore was not involved in any of the crimes committed.  She then went to go on about her past of how her grandfather had sexually abused her and that she was raped at 13. Moore was released and Wournos faced trial.  In court the evidence summed up and Wuornos was sentenced to the electric chair. Wournos was unlike other female serial killers, who’s motive is usually profit.  But in this case the motive seemed to be revenge, because Wuornos had been raped and abused by men.

May 8th
1:38 PM

The Execution of Aileen Wuornos

Highway prostitute Aileen Carol Wuornos, known as the “Damsel of Death” for the seven slayings she is believed to committed, was executed by lethal injection on October 9, 2002 at the Florida State Prison. The 46-year-old serial killer was pronounced dead at 9:47 a.m. 6 minutes after the injection process began. She was executed for the 1989 killing of Palm Harbour, Fla., electrician Harry Mallory, but has confessed to five others and was a suspect in a seventh. Mallory’s trial was held in Daytona Beach. “We did wake her up at 5:30. She requested a towel and washcloth to wash her face and freshen up,” said prison spokesman Sterling Ivy before the execution. “She was very calm this morning. Not as talkative as she has been in the past.” Wuornos declined the traditional last meal, which could have been anything she wanted for under $20, and instead was given a cup of coffee.

A half-dozen anti-death penalty demonstrators were outside the prison, but were outnumbered by corrections officers. Wuornos was strapped to a gurney and hooked to two intravenous lines. Thirty-two witnesses watched as she was wheeled into the death chamber where an executioner pumped deadly chemicals into her system. “We can testify that that lethal injection is certainly more of a humane way to terminate life than the electric chair,” said State Attorney John Tanner, who prosecuted the case in Daytona Beach. “She expressed in her last psychiatric examination relief that the electric chair had been abolished in the state of Florida.” Wuornos went to her death willingly. She fired her attorneys and opposed appeals made on her behalf. Two appeals were turned down by the Florida Supreme Court Tuesday. They both contended Wuornos was insane and not competent enough for her execution. In her final statement, Wuornos said: “Yes, I would just like to say I’m sailing with the rock, and I’ll be back, like Independence Day with Jesus. June 6, like the movie. Big mother ship and all, I’ll be back, I’ll be back.” She had written the Florida Supreme Court last year to say she “would prefer to cut to the chase and get on with the execution. Taxpayers’ money has been squandered and the families have suffered enough.”

May 7th
6:10 PM
Convicted murderer Aileen Wuornos final words before being executed by lethal injection in October 2002 in Florida, were -

“I’d just like to say I’m sailing with the rock, and I’ll be back like Independence Day, with Jesus June 6. Like the movie, big mother ship and all, I’ll be back.”

Convicted murderer Aileen Wuornos final words before being executed by lethal injection in October 2002 in Florida, were -

“I’d just like to say I’m sailing with the rock, and I’ll be back like Independence Day, with Jesus June 6. Like the movie, big mother ship and all, I’ll be back.”

April 21st
4:49 AM


“All I want to do is go back to the prison, wait for the chair and get the hell off this planet, that is full of evil.”
Near Christmas time, 1989, the body of Richard Mallory was found in woods in Ormond Beach, Florida.  He had been shot 4 times with a .22 handgun.  Twelve more months past, 6 more dead men were found.  All the victims were middle aged and found near highways.  They had been robbed of money and valuable possessions, and their cars had been stolen and found shortly afterwards.  All the victims had been shot by a .22 handgun. The FBI knew that there was one or two female serial killers on the loose.  If the killer/s was male, there had been no evidence of homosexual activity.  It was clear that the motive wasn’t just gain. The announcement of a female serial killer set the media into a frenzy.  Soon after witnesses came forward to give police descriptions of two women seen abandoning a car belonging to that of one of the dead men. The descriptions were released in December 1990, soon after people came forward who recognised the pictures as 28-year-old Tyria J. Moore and 34-year-old Aileen Wuornos.  Moore was arrested by police and agreed to testify against Wuornos, who was her lesbian partner. In January 1991 Wuornos was arrested and confessed to killing the men in self defense as they had tried to rape her.  The question raised that brought her claims to be false was why would a woman shoot several men who had supposedly tried rape her in the space of just 12 months.  She also told of how Moore was not involved in any of the crimes committed.  She then went to go on about her past of how her grandfather had sexually abused her and that she was raped at 13. Moore was released and Wournos faced trial.  In court the evidence summed up and Wuornos was sentenced to the electric chair. Wournos was unlike other female serial killers, who’s motive is usually profit.  But in this case the motive seemed to be revenge, because Wuornos had been raped and abused by men.

“All I want to do is go back to the prison, wait for the chair and get the hell off this planet, that is full of evil.”

Near Christmas time, 1989, the body of Richard Mallory was found in woods in Ormond Beach, Florida.  He had been shot 4 times with a .22 handgun.  Twelve more months past, 6 more dead men were found.  All the victims were middle aged and found near highways.  They had been robbed of money and valuable possessions, and their cars had been stolen and found shortly afterwards.  All the victims had been shot by a .22 handgun. The FBI knew that there was one or two female serial killers on the loose.  If the killer/s was male, there had been no evidence of homosexual activity.  It was clear that the motive wasn’t just gain. The announcement of a female serial killer set the media into a frenzy.  Soon after witnesses came forward to give police descriptions of two women seen abandoning a car belonging to that of one of the dead men. The descriptions were released in December 1990, soon after people came forward who recognised the pictures as 28-year-old Tyria J. Moore and 34-year-old Aileen Wuornos.  Moore was arrested by police and agreed to testify against Wuornos, who was her lesbian partner. In January 1991 Wuornos was arrested and confessed to killing the men in self defense as they had tried to rape her.  The question raised that brought her claims to be false was why would a woman shoot several men who had supposedly tried rape her in the space of just 12 months.  She also told of how Moore was not involved in any of the crimes committed.  She then went to go on about her past of how her grandfather had sexually abused her and that she was raped at 13. Moore was released and Wournos faced trial.  In court the evidence summed up and Wuornos was sentenced to the electric chair. Wournos was unlike other female serial killers, who’s motive is usually profit.  But in this case the motive seemed to be revenge, because Wuornos had been raped and abused by men.

March 27th
4:47 PM

Aileen Wuornos (born February 29, 1956) was an American serial killer. The movie “Monster” is supposed to be based on her life. Her father, Leo Arthur Pittman, was a child molester who served time in Kansas and Michigan mental hospitals. He died by hanging while in prison in 1969. Wuornos’ mother abandoned Aileen and her brother in 1960 and left them in the care of their maternal grandparents. Wuornos claimed that her grandfather physically and sexually abused her as a child and that her grandmother was an alcoholic. She also said to have had sex with several partners upon the age of 12, including her brother Keith. Wuornos became pregnant at the age of 14 and delivered her son at a Detroit maternity home on March 23, 1971. The child was put up for adoption soon after. Wuornos began to work as a prostitute while still in school. She soon dropped out of school to work the streets full-time, earning her way as a teenage hooker and drifted across the country.In May 1974 Wuornos was jailed in Colorado for drunk driving and firing a gun from a moving vehicle. In 1976 she married 76-year-old yacht club president Lewis Gratz Fell. They were divorced six weeks later. From 1977 to 1989 Wuornos was arrested several times, used different names and made her way to Florida. Wuornos’ first victim was store owner Richard Mallory in Palm Harbor, Florida. According to Wuornos Mallory had sexually assaulted her on November 30 in 1989 after tying her to the car. She killed six more men between June 1990 and November 1990. After being identified and put in custody she made a full confession and cited self-defense for Mallory’s murder. She was convicted of his murder in January 1992. Although it was later uncovered that Mallory had served 10 years for violent rape in another state, Wuornos was never given a re-trial.

March 22nd
7:11 PM
Convicted murderer Aileen Wuornos final words before being executed by lethal injection in October 2002 in Florida, were -

“I’d just like to say I’m sailing with the rock, and I’ll be back like Independence Day, with Jesus June 6. Like the movie, big mother ship and all, I’ll be back.”

Convicted murderer Aileen Wuornos final words before being executed by lethal injection in October 2002 in Florida, were -

“I’d just like to say I’m sailing with the rock, and I’ll be back like Independence Day, with Jesus June 6. Like the movie, big mother ship and all, I’ll be back.”

March 18th
2:41 PM
Serial killer Aileen Wuornos got married in 1976 to a man named Lewis Fell. It didn’t last too long before he had it annulled.

Serial killer Aileen Wuornos got married in 1976 to a man named Lewis Fell. It didn’t last too long before he had it annulled.

March 10th
12:05 PM

“I reached for my gun. I shot him. I scrambled to cover the shooting because I didn’t think the police would believe I killed him in self-defense….I have to say it. I killed them all because they got violent with me and I decided to defend myself….I’m sure if after the fightin’ they found I had a weapon, they would’ve shot me. So I just shot them….”
-Aileen Wuornos.

“I reached for my gun. I shot him. I scrambled to cover the shooting because I didn’t think the police would believe I killed him in self-defense….I have to say it. I killed them all because they got violent with me and I decided to defend myself….I’m sure if after the fightin’ they found I had a weapon, they would’ve shot me. So I just shot them….”

-Aileen Wuornos.

March 5th
7:59 PM

Perpetrator:
Aileen Carol Wuornos (1956-2002)
Crimes:
Serial murder, robbery and car theft
Victims:
Walker Antonio, aged 62
Troy Burress, aged 50
Charles Carskadden, aged 40
Dick Humphreys, aged 56
Richard Mallory aged 51
Peter Siems, aged 65
David Spears, aged 43
Dates:
1989-90
Place:
Florida (USA)
Sentence:
Executed by lethal injection on 9 October 2002 at Florida State Prison

Perpetrator:

Aileen Carol Wuornos (1956-2002)

Crimes:

Serial murder, robbery and car theft

Victims:

Walker Antonio, aged 62

Troy Burress, aged 50

Charles Carskadden, aged 40

Dick Humphreys, aged 56

Richard Mallory aged 51

Peter Siems, aged 65

David Spears, aged 43

Dates:

1989-90

Place:

Florida (USA)

Sentence:

Executed by lethal injection on 9 October 2002 at Florida State Prison

11:39 AM

“In a macabre way, looking at the changing face of a serial killer is like looking at the changing face of America…”

March 4th
8:31 AM
March 2nd
10:36 PM

The Timeline of a Murder of Aileen Wuornos

1. May 19, 1990. David Spears of Bradenton, Florida informs his boss (Spears is a heavy equipment operator) that he is going to be heading up to Orlando, to visit his ex-wife. He sets off that day from his workplace in Sarasota.

2. While traveling through Citrus County, he picks up Aileen Wuornos. It is likely that they had sex, as a used condom was later found near his naked (apart from a baseball cap) body.

3. Having had sex, Wuornos produces the .22 handgun she carried with her. She shoots Spears a total of six times, killing him at the scene.

4. Wuornos dumps Spears’ body along the Interstate 75 in Citrus County. She has removed the license plate and leaves the doors to the vehicle unlocked.

5. Later, at Ormand Beach, Wuornos pawns a set of machine tools that match the description of those take from Spears’ truck.

March 1st
3:29 PM
Aileen Wuornos drifted around the highways of Florida,   homeless and penniless. Her life was a tangled thread of alcohol and   loneliness. She hung around the haunts of Hell’s Angels, but sought   women for love. Aileen Wuornos hated men as the source of all her   troubles and lured them to their death.

Aileen Wuornos drifted around the highways of Florida, homeless and penniless. Her life was a tangled thread of alcohol and loneliness. She hung around the haunts of Hell’s Angels, but sought women for love. Aileen Wuornos hated men as the source of all her troubles and lured them to their death.

February 15th
4:14 PM