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Unsolved
"Astrological" Murders - California
Between December 1969 and November 1970, police in Northern California linked nine unsolved murders with a single perpetrator, still at large. A common bond is found in the disposal of the bodies, cast off in ravines, and in the killer's hypothetical obsession with astrology. Of nine acknowledged victims , seven died in fair proximity to a seasonal solstice or equinox, while two were slain on Friday the thirteenth. Additionally, it is possible the murders may have lasted through December 1973, with six more victims added to the body count.


"Ivan the Ripper"
A decade after Vladimir Ionosyan sparked a local panic with the "Mosgas" murders, residents of Moscow circulated rumors of another homicidal maniac at large. According to reports, the slayer was a fair-haired, handsome young man, armed with a cobbler's bodkin or similar instrument, who trailed his female victims from the ornate subway stations, stabbing them to death in nearby streets and alleys.


Alaska - Unsolved Murders
In January 1931, it was announced that the United States Attorney General's office was committing federal agents to the search for an elusive killer, blamed for fifteen murders and a string of unsolved disappearances in the territory of Alaska. All of the killings and disappearances were reported from the southeastern part of the territory, in the wilderness area between Fairbanks and the Gulf of Alaska. Hunters and fishermen lived in constant fear of the nameless slayer who struck without warning, trailing his victims to isolated killing grounds, leaving no trace of himself behind. In every case, it was reported that the killer "slipped away with ghost-like ease."


Ax Murders - Alabama
Between November 1919 and October 1923, residents of Birmingham, Alabama, were terrorized by a series of brutal assaults, committed by ax-wielding blacks, which claimed the lives of at least fifteen victims , leaving others gravely injured. In most cases, the targets were immigrant merchants in outlying parts of the city, wounded or killed in their shops by assailants who afterward robbed them of money or merchandise.


Ax Murders - Louisiana and Texas
Between January 1911 and April 1912, an unidentified killer (or killers) slaughtered 49 victims in the states of Louisiana and Texas, leaving police baffled. In each case, the dead were mulattoes or black members of families with mulatto children. The killers were supposed, by blacks and law enforcement officers alike, to be dark-skinned Negroes, selecting victims on the basis of their mixed-or "tainted"-blood.


Cincinnati - Unsolved Murders
Suburban Cumminsville is normally a peaceful place, but in the six-year period from 1904 to 1910 it earned the grisly reputation of a "murder zone," where women walked in fear and dreaded riding street cars after nightfall. A ferocious "mad killer" was on the loose, claiming five victims within a mile of the point where Spring Grove Avenue meets Winton Road, eluding the police and neighborhood patrols to leave a nagging legacy of doubt and mystery behind.


Columbus, Ohio - Unsolved Murders
On May 23, 1966, Loren Bollinger, a 40-year-old rocket scientist at Ohio State University in Columbus, was ambushed and shot to death outside his downtown office. Five bullets were extracted from his corpse, including one which pierced the brain; ballistics tests linked the .25-caliber weapon with the murders of two gas station attendants, in or near Columbus, in the past eight months.


Denver - Unsolved Murders
A puzzling case from Colorado made the headlines during August 1912, when music teacher Signe Carlzen was reported slain in Denver. On the night of August 9, the victim left a student's home at nine o'clock, prepared to hike across a lonely, open field to reach the street car that would take her home. When she had not arrived by 2 a.m., her family launched a search, but seven hours passed before a farmer found her body in the field.


Gay Murders - New York (1973)
In January 1973, a series of brutal, stabbings cast a pall over New York City's free-wheeling homosexual community, sparking angry demands for police protection in quarters where officers are normally viewed as the enemy. Targeting denizens of the gay "leather" scene, a faceless butcher mutilated seven victims in a little over three weeks' time, ending the murder spree as suddenly and mysteriously as it began.


Highway Murders - Germany
In September of 1935, authorities in Berlin were plagued by a sudden rash of unexplained -- and unsolved -- violent crimes. While firemen were kept busy with an outbreak of arson accidents, blamed on "malignant maniacs," other culprits were stretching taut wires across rural highways by night, wrecking cars and injuring or killing their occupants.


Jack The Ripper
The world's most notorious serial killer was active for only ten weeks, during which time he murdered five victims . Despite the relatively modest body count, his crimes terrorized the most populous city on earth, making headlines around the globe. To this day, London's unidentified prostitute-killer remains the subject of more books, plays, films and articles than any other felon in recorded history.


Jack The Stripper
Seventy years after Jack the Ripper murdered and disemboweled prostitutes in London's East End, a new generation of hookers learned to live with the ever-present fear of a lurking killer. This "Jack" carried no knife and penned no jaunty letters to the press, but he was every bit as lethal (claiming eight victims to the Ripper's five) and possessed of far greater longevity (operating over nearly six years, instead of the Ripper's ten weeks). At the "conclusion" of the case, both slayers shared a common attribute: despite a wealth of theories and assertions, neither "Jack" was ever publicly identified.


Lover's Lane Gunman
While homicide detectives in New York were stalking the elusive "Son of Sam," their counterparts in Georgia were attempting to identify a killer with a similar M.0., who preyed on couples parked on darkened lanes, attacking from the shadows, interrupting passion with the searing blasts of point-blank gunfire. In Manhattan, officers eventually bagged a suspect; in Atlanta, there was no such luck. As this is written, Georgia's phantom gunman still remains at large.


Murder Alley
Kenosha's "murder alley" is an unpaved strip of land running south from 64th Street, between 20th and 21st Avenues. Two blocks away, the downtown business district bustles with activity, but residents along the alley live with daily apprehension that is more akin to an excursion through the Twilight Zone.


New Castle, PA - Unsolved Murders
While homicide detectives in Ohio stalked the Cleveland "torso killer" through the latter 1930s, they were periodically distracted by reports of unsolved slayings from the area of New Castle and West Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. No solid link between the crime sprees was established, but coincidence of timing, the proximity of common railway lines, and the unanimous decapitation of victims in both states have produced some tantalizing theories. No two reports agree upon the number of New Castle victims, and several accounts make surprisingly detailed reference to non-existent crimes. A retrospective survey in the local paper, published in December 1971, refers to eleven victims slain between 1921 and 1940, but a detailed review of newspaper records reveals only five murders, spanning a period of fourteen years.
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Wladyslaw Mazurkiewics, The World Famous Crawlspace Brothers (2006), John Norman Collins, Sorrow by Phillip Jablonski, Guy Georges, Mildred McSparen, Gertrude Baniszewski, Kevin Haley, The World Famous Crawlspace Brothers (2006), Munro: The Childhood Years - By James Munro, Robert Rozier, Mack Ray Edwards, Ed Gein: Lost Soul, Anthony Wimberly, Thomas Quick
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02/09/2010 12:41 AM
Dahmer And Kemper are tied. about time.
02/08/2010 11:21 PM
It's all good, brutha.
Joe
02/08/2010 11:15 PM
I should stop logging in when I'm drunk, I read PM's and forget all about 'em...my bad boss
02/08/2010 10:55 PM
You don't have the message "Homeslice" in your inbox?
02/08/2010 10:54 PM
Let me check my outbox...
Joe
02/08/2010 10:53 PM
Did you send me one of just Kemper? I didn't get it if you did.
02/08/2010 9:56 PM
I crack myself up.
02/08/2010 9:56 PM
Well, I'm not making another trophy if it does. Maybe Joe can bust-out MS Paint and scribble over "Edmund Kemper" if he wants.
02/08/2010 3:53 PM
It may result in a tie .. haha ..
Joe
02/07/2010 10:21 PM
I dunno, might give it another week, depends on when I get in the mood to change it Smile
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