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Encyclopedia > Ed Kemper

Edmund Emil Kemper III (born December 18, 1948, in Burbank, California), aka The Co-ed Killer, is a serial murderer and necrophiliac who was active in the early 1970s. Kemper killed and dismembered six female hitchhikers in the Santa Cruz, California area. He then murdered his mother and one of his mother's friends before turning himself in to the authorities. He had previously been incarcerated as a teenager for shooting both his grandparents while staying on their farm in North Folk, California.

Contents

His crimes

On August 27, 1964, Kemper shot his grandmother while she sat at the kitchen table putting the finishing touches on her latest children's book. When his grandfather came home from grocery shopping, Kemper shot him as well. Then he called his mother who urged him to call the police. Kemper was committed at Atascadero State Hospital. He was eventually released into his mother's care in Santa Cruz, California, against the wishes of several doctors at the hospital. It was not the first time that Kemper had convinced psychologists that he was well. He did so during his subsequent murderous rampage and managed to have his juvenile records sealed forever.


Kemper worked a series of odd jobs before securing work with the Division of Highways. By that time his height had reached 6 feet 9 inches and he weighed over 300 pounds.


Between May 1972 and February 1973, Edmund Kemper embarked on a spree of murders, picking up female students hitchhiking, taking them to isolated rural areas and killing them. He would stab, shoot or smother the victims and afterwards take the bodies back to his apartment, hack them to pieces and have sex with the remains. He would often dump the bodies in ravines or bury them in fields, although on one occasion he buried the severed head of a 15-year-old girl in his mother's garden as a kind of sick joke. He killed six college girls in this way and quite often he would go hunting for victims after arguing with his mother.


In April 1973, Edmund Kemper battered his mother to death with a hammer as she slept. His murderous urges not yet sated, he then invited one of his mother's friends over and killed her too, strangling her with such brutality that he broke her neck. The next day, Kemper hit the road and drove east, cruising aimlessly and listening to radio broadcast for news of a manhunt. By the time he reached Pueblo, Colorado, a few days later, Kemper was frustrated that his mother's body had not been found and there was no manhunt. He called the police and confessed over the phone, although it took a number of calls before the police finally realized Kemper was serious. A lone officer was sent to arrest him as he waited patiently by the side of a road.


In custody, Kemper gave a full and frank confession to his killing spree, seemingly unashamed as he confessed to necrophilia and cannibalism. At his trial he pleaded insanity, but he found guilty on eight counts of murder. He asked for the death penalty but, with capital punishmet suspended at that time, he instead received life imprisonment.


At the time of Kemper's murder spree in Santa Cruz, another serial killer named Herbert Mullin was also active, earning the small Californian town the dubious title of 'Serial Murder Capital Of The World'. Kemper and Mullin were briefly held in adjoining cells, with the former angrily accusing the latter of stealing his body-dumping sites.


He is currently incarcerated in Folsom Prison. He allegedly possesses a near-genius IQ.


Victims of Ed Kemper

Books

  • Cheney, Margaret, Why: The Serial Killer in America. R& E Publishers:Saratoga, CA. 1992.
  • Ressler, Robert K., Whoever Fights Monsters: My Twenty Years Tracking Serial Killers for The FBI. (approx. 20 pages on Kemper).

External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Criminal Profiling Research Site. Scientific Offender Profiling Resource in Switzerland. Criminology, Law, Psychology. ... (2711 words)
Kemper was able to talk one girl into climbing into the trunk, then he got in the backseat of his car, handcuffed and tied up the second girl, then stabbed and strangled her.
Kemper later said that in the course of the murders, there was always some detail that didn't happen as planned, or that he felt could have been more perfect.
Kemper was put into prison, where he calmed down and became a well-behaved inmate, accepted into the prison population, gradually given increasing amounts of privileges within the institution.
serial killer true crime library * serial killer news * list of serial killers * serial murder * female serial killers ... (1101 words)
Ed Kemper's mom thought her son was "a real weirdo." He had a near-genius IQ hidden within his lanky body and twisted mind.
Kemper later told police, "even when she was dead, she was still bitching at me. I couldn't get her to shut up!" Then he decided to use her head as a dart board.
Ed now resides in the Vacaville Prison where he is their model serial killer prisoner with a heart of gold.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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